CN114794578A - Heating element, atomizer and electronic atomization device - Google Patents
Heating element, atomizer and electronic atomization device Download PDFInfo
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- CN114794578A CN114794578A CN202111656422.0A CN202111656422A CN114794578A CN 114794578 A CN114794578 A CN 114794578A CN 202111656422 A CN202111656422 A CN 202111656422A CN 114794578 A CN114794578 A CN 114794578A
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A24—TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
- A24F—SMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
- A24F40/00—Electrically operated smoking devices; Component parts thereof; Manufacture thereof; Maintenance or testing thereof; Charging means specially adapted therefor
- A24F40/40—Constructional details, e.g. connection of cartridges and battery parts
- A24F40/46—Shape or structure of electric heating means
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A24—TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
- A24F—SMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
- A24F40/00—Electrically operated smoking devices; Component parts thereof; Manufacture thereof; Maintenance or testing thereof; Charging means specially adapted therefor
- A24F40/10—Devices using liquid inhalable precursors
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A24—TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
- A24F—SMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
- A24F40/00—Electrically operated smoking devices; Component parts thereof; Manufacture thereof; Maintenance or testing thereof; Charging means specially adapted therefor
- A24F40/40—Constructional details, e.g. connection of cartridges and battery parts
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A24—TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
- A24F—SMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
- A24F40/00—Electrically operated smoking devices; Component parts thereof; Manufacture thereof; Maintenance or testing thereof; Charging means specially adapted therefor
- A24F40/40—Constructional details, e.g. connection of cartridges and battery parts
- A24F40/42—Cartridges or containers for inhalable precursors
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A24—TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
- A24F—SMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
- A24F40/00—Electrically operated smoking devices; Component parts thereof; Manufacture thereof; Maintenance or testing thereof; Charging means specially adapted therefor
- A24F40/40—Constructional details, e.g. connection of cartridges and battery parts
- A24F40/48—Fluid transfer means, e.g. pumps
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A24—TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
- A24F—SMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
- A24F47/00—Smokers' requisites not otherwise provided for
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M11/00—Sprayers or atomisers specially adapted for therapeutic purposes
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M15/00—Inhalators
- A61M15/06—Inhaling appliances shaped like cigars, cigarettes or pipes
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Abstract
The application discloses a heating component, an atomizer and an electronic atomization device, wherein the heating component comprises a first base body and a second base body; the first substrate is provided with a first surface and a second surface which are oppositely arranged, and the first surface is a liquid absorption surface; the first substrate having a plurality of first pores for directing aerosol generating substrate from the liquid-absorbing surface to the second surface; the second substrate is provided with a third surface and a fourth surface which are oppositely arranged, and the fourth surface is an atomization surface; the second surface is opposite to the third surface; the second substrate is a dense substrate, and a plurality of second micropores penetrating through the third surface and the fourth surface are formed in the second substrate and used for guiding the aerosol-generating substrate to the atomization surface from the third surface; the first substrate and/or the second substrate form a flow channel, the flow channel is communicated with the first micropore and the second micropore, bubbles can be removed through the flow channel, bubble blockage liquid supply on a liquid absorption surface is avoided, and dry burning is further avoided.
Description
Technical Field
The application relates to the technical field of electronic atomization, in particular to a heating component, an atomizer and an electronic atomization device.
Background
The electronic atomization device comprises a heating body, a battery, a control circuit and the like, wherein the heating body is used as a core element of the electronic atomization device, and the characteristics of the heating body determine the atomization effect and the use experience of the electronic atomization device.
One of the existing heating elements is a cotton core heating element. The cotton core heating element is mostly in a structure that a spring-shaped metal heating wire is wound by a cotton rope or a fiber rope. The liquid aerosol generating substrate to be atomized is sucked by two ends of the cotton rope or the fiber rope and then is transmitted to the central metal heating wire for heating and atomization. The limited end area of the cotton or fibre strands results in a less efficient adsorption and transport of the aerosol-generating substrate. In addition, the cotton rope or the fiber rope has poor structural stability, and is easy to generate dry burning, carbon deposition, burnt smell and the like after multiple thermal cycles.
Another existing heating element is a ceramic heating element. The ceramic heating body mostly forms a metal heating film on the surface of the porous ceramic body; the porous ceramic body plays a role in guiding and storing liquid, and the metal heating film realizes the heating and atomization of the liquid aerosol generating substrate. However, it is difficult to precisely control the position distribution and the dimensional accuracy of the micropores in the porous ceramic prepared by high-temperature sintering. In order to reduce the risk of leakage, the pore size and porosity need to be reduced, but in order to achieve sufficient liquid supply, the pore size and porosity need to be increased, which are contradictory. At present, under the conditions of aperture and porosity meeting the low liquid leakage risk, the liquid-guiding capacity of a porous ceramic matrix is limited, and the porous ceramic matrix can generate burnt odor under the condition of high power.
With the progress of the technology, the requirement of a user on the atomization effect of the electronic atomization device is higher and higher, and in order to meet the requirement of the user, a thin heating body is provided to improve the liquid supply capacity, but the thin heating body is easy to form bubbles on a liquid suction surface, so that the liquid inlet is blocked, and the heating body is dried.
Disclosure of Invention
The application provides a heating element, atomizer and electronic atomization device solves the technical problem that thin heat-generating body easily forms the bubble at the imbibition face among the prior art.
In order to solve the above technical problem, a first technical solution provided by the present application is: providing a heat-generating component comprising a first substrate and a second substrate; the first substrate is provided with a first surface and a second surface which are oppositely arranged, and the first surface is a liquid absorption surface; the first substrate having a plurality of first pores for directing aerosol generating substrate from the liquid-absorbing surface to the second surface; the second substrate is provided with a third surface and a fourth surface which are oppositely arranged, and the fourth surface is an atomization surface; the second surface is arranged opposite to the third surface; the second substrate is a dense substrate having a plurality of second pores extending through the third surface and the fourth surface, the second pores being configured to direct the aerosol-generating substrate from the third surface to the aerosolization surface; wherein the first substrate and/or the second substrate form a flow channel, and the flow channel is communicated with the first micropore and the second micropore.
Wherein, the second surface sets up the formation clearance with the interval between the third surface, the clearance is as the runner.
Wherein the heat generating component further comprises a spacer; the spacer is arranged between the second surface and the third surface and is positioned at the edge of the first base and/or the second base, so that the first base and the second base are arranged at intervals to form the gap.
Wherein the spacer is a separately disposed spacer; or, the spacer is a support column or a support frame fixed on the second surface and/or the third surface; or, the spacer is a protrusion integrally formed with the first base and/or the second base.
Wherein the heat generating component further comprises a sealing member having a weep hole; and a fixing structure is arranged on the hole wall of the liquid discharge hole to fix the first base body and/or the second base body, so that the first base body and the second base body are arranged at intervals to form the gap.
Wherein the height of the gap is the same along a direction parallel to the first substrate.
Wherein the height of the gap gradually increases along a direction parallel to the first base heating element.
Wherein the height of the gap gradually increases from zero.
Wherein, the heating assembly further comprises a plurality of microcolumns, and the microcolumns are arranged in the gap.
One end of the micro-column is abutted against the second surface, and the other end of the micro-column is arranged at an interval with the third surface; or one end of the microcolumn is abutted against the third surface, and the other end of the microcolumn is arranged at an interval with the second surface; or one end of the micro-column is abutted against the second surface, and the other end of the micro-column is abutted against the third surface.
The third surface is provided with a plurality of first grooves extending along a first direction and a plurality of second grooves extending along a second direction, and the first grooves and the second grooves are arranged in a crossed manner; the plurality of first grooves and the plurality of second grooves form the flow passage.
The plurality of second micropores are distributed in an array, each first groove corresponds to one or more rows of the second micropores, and each second groove corresponds to one or more columns of the second micropores.
Wherein, the ratio of the depth to the width of the first groove is 0-20, and the ratio of the depth to the width of the second groove is 0-20.
The second surface is provided with a plurality of third grooves extending along a third direction and a plurality of fourth grooves extending along a fourth direction, and the third grooves and the fourth grooves are arranged in a crossed manner; the first grooves, the second grooves, the third grooves and the fourth grooves form the flow channel together.
Wherein the first substrate is a dense substrate, and the first micropores penetrate through the first surface and the second surface; the plurality of first micropores are distributed in an array, each third groove corresponds to one or more rows of the first micropores, and each fourth groove corresponds to one or more columns of the first micropores.
Wherein, the ratio of the depth to the width of the third groove is 0-20, and the ratio of the depth to the width of the fourth groove is 0-20.
Wherein the capillary force of the first groove and the second groove is greater than that of the third groove and the fourth groove.
Wherein the second surface and the third surface are arranged at intervals to form a gap.
Wherein the second surface is in contact with the third surface.
Wherein the depth of the first groove and the depth of the second groove are greater than the depth of the third groove and the depth of the fourth groove.
Wherein a central axis of the second micro-hole is perpendicular to the third surface.
Wherein the thickness of the second substrate is 0.1mm-1mm, and the pore diameter of the second micropores is 1 μm-100 μm.
Wherein a ratio of the thickness of the second substrate to the pore diameter of the second micropores is 20:1 to 3: 1.
Wherein the ratio of the hole center distance of the adjacent second micropores to the hole diameter of the second micropores is 3:1-5: 1.
Wherein the first substrate is a dense substrate, and the first micropores penetrate through the first surface and the second surface.
Wherein the capillary force of the second micro-pores is greater than the capillary force of the first micro-pores.
Wherein the pore diameter of the first micropores becomes gradually larger along the thickness direction of the first substrate; the constricting port of the first micropore is positioned on the first surface, and the expanding port of the first micropore is positioned on the second surface.
Wherein a projection of the area of the first substrate on which the first micro-holes are disposed on the second substrate completely covers the area of the second substrate on which the second micro-holes are disposed.
Wherein the pore diameter of the first micropores is 1-100 μm.
Wherein the thickness of the first substrate is less than the thickness of the second substrate.
The heating component also comprises a heating element, and the heating element is an independent element arranged on the atomization surface; or the second substrate has a conductive function.
Wherein the projection of the first substrate on the atomization surface completely covers the heating element.
In order to solve the above technical problem, a second technical solution provided by the present application is: providing a heat-generating component comprising a first substrate and a second substrate; the first substrate is provided with a first surface and a second surface which are oppositely arranged, and the first surface is a liquid absorption surface; the first substrate having a plurality of first pores for directing aerosol generating substrate from the liquid-absorbing surface to the second surface; the second substrate is provided with a third surface and a fourth surface which are oppositely arranged, and the fourth surface is an atomization surface; the second surface is arranged opposite to the third surface; the second substrate having a plurality of second micro-pores for guiding the aerosol-generating substrate from the third surface to the atomising surface; wherein the first substrate and/or the second substrate form a flow channel, and the flow channel is communicated with the first micropore and the second micropore.
In order to solve the above technical problem, a third technical solution provided by the present application is: an atomizer is provided, which comprises a liquid storage cavity and a heating component; the reservoir chamber is for storing an aerosol-generating substrate; the heating component is in fluid communication with the reservoir chamber, the heating component being for atomising the aerosol-generating substrate; the heating component is any one of the heating components described above.
In order to solve the above technical problem, a fourth technical solution provided by the present application is: the electronic atomization device comprises an atomizer and a host; the atomizer is the atomizer; the host is used for providing electric energy for the work of the atomizer and controlling the heating component to atomize the aerosol generating substrate.
The application provides a heating assembly, an atomizer and an electronic atomization device, wherein the heating assembly comprises a first base body and a second base body; the first substrate is provided with a first surface and a second surface which are oppositely arranged, and the first surface is a liquid absorption surface; the first substrate having a plurality of first pores for directing aerosol generating substrate from the liquid-absorbing surface to the second surface; the second substrate is provided with a third surface and a fourth surface which are oppositely arranged, and the fourth surface is an atomization surface; the second surface is opposite to the third surface; the second substrate is a dense substrate, and a plurality of second micropores penetrating through the third surface and the fourth surface are formed in the second substrate and used for guiding the aerosol-generating substrate to the atomization surface from the third surface; the first substrate and/or the second substrate form a flow channel, the flow channel is communicated with the first micropore and the second micropore, bubbles can be removed through the flow channel, bubble blockage liquid supply on a liquid absorption surface is avoided, and dry burning is further avoided.
Drawings
In order to more clearly illustrate the technical solutions in the embodiments of the present application, the drawings needed to be used in the description of the embodiments are briefly introduced below, and it is obvious that the drawings in the following description are only some embodiments of the present application, and it is obvious for those skilled in the art to obtain other drawings based on these drawings without creative efforts.
FIG. 1 is a schematic structural diagram of an embodiment of an electronic atomizer device provided herein;
FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram of an atomizer according to an embodiment of the present application;
FIG. 3a is a schematic structural diagram of a first embodiment of a heat generating component provided herein;
FIG. 3b is a schematic diagram of the second substrate of the heating element provided in FIG. 3a, viewed from the atomizing surface side;
FIG. 3c is a schematic view of the first substrate of the heating element provided in FIG. 3a, viewed from the liquid-absorbing side;
FIG. 3d is a schematic structural view of another embodiment of a spacer member in the heating assembly provided in FIG. 3 a;
FIG. 4 is a schematic structural diagram of a second embodiment of a heat generating component provided herein;
FIG. 5a is a schematic structural view of another embodiment of a seal in a second embodiment of a heat-generating component provided herein;
FIG. 5b is a schematic view of the assembly of the seal provided in FIG. 5a with a first dense substrate and a second substrate;
FIG. 6a is a schematic structural view of yet another embodiment of a seal in a second embodiment of a heat-generating component provided herein;
FIG. 6b is a schematic view of the assembly of the seal provided in FIG. 6a with a first dense substrate and a second substrate;
FIG. 7a is a schematic structural diagram of a third embodiment of a heat generating component provided herein;
FIG. 7b is a schematic view of a portion of the second substrate of the heating element shown in FIG. 7a, viewed from the third surface side;
FIG. 7c is a schematic view of a portion of the first substrate of the heating element shown in FIG. 7a, viewed from the second surface side;
FIG. 8 is another schematic structural view of a third embodiment of a heat generating component provided herein;
fig. 9a is a schematic top view of a fourth embodiment of a heat generating component provided in the present application;
FIG. 9B is a schematic cross-sectional view of the heater assembly provided in FIG. 9a taken along the direction B-B;
FIG. 9C is a schematic cross-sectional view of the heating assembly provided in FIG. 9a taken along the direction C-C;
FIG. 9d is a schematic view of a liquid inlet in a fourth embodiment of a heat generating component according to the present application in another embodiment;
FIG. 9e is a schematic structural view of a liquid inlet in a fourth embodiment of a heat generating component according to the present application;
FIG. 10a is a schematic top view of a fifth embodiment of a heat generating component according to the present application;
FIG. 10b is a schematic view of a liquid inlet in a fifth embodiment of a heat generating component according to the present application in another embodiment;
FIG. 10c is a schematic view of a liquid inlet in a fifth embodiment of a heat-generating component according to the present application in a structure according to yet another embodiment;
FIG. 10d is a schematic structural diagram of a sixth embodiment of a heat-generating component provided herein;
FIG. 11 is a schematic structural view of a seventh embodiment of a heat generating component provided herein;
FIG. 12 is a schematic structural view of a first test piece;
FIG. 13 is a schematic structural view of a second test piece;
fig. 14 is a schematic structural view of the third experimental piece.
Detailed Description
The technical solutions in the embodiments of the present application will be clearly and completely described below with reference to the drawings in the embodiments of the present application, and it is obvious that the described embodiments are only a part of the embodiments of the present application, and not all of the embodiments. All other embodiments, which can be derived by a person skilled in the art from the embodiments given herein without making any creative effort, shall fall within the protection scope of the present application.
In the following description, for purposes of explanation and not limitation, specific details are set forth such as particular system structures, interfaces, techniques, etc. in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present application.
The terms "first", "second" and "third" in this application are used for descriptive purposes only and are not to be construed as indicating or implying relative importance or implying any indication of the number of technical features indicated. Thus, features defined as "first", "second", and "third" may explicitly or implicitly include at least one of the described features. In the description of the present application, "plurality" means at least two, e.g., two, three, etc., unless explicitly specifically limited otherwise. All directional indications (such as up, down, left, right, front, and rear … …) in the embodiments of the present application are only used to explain the relative positional relationship between the components, the movement, and the like in a specific posture (as shown in the drawings), and if the specific posture is changed, the directional indication is changed accordingly. The terms "comprising" and "having" and any variations thereof in the embodiments of the present application are intended to cover non-exclusive inclusions. For example, a process, method, system, article, or apparatus that comprises a list of steps or elements is not limited to only those steps or elements listed, but may alternatively include other steps or elements not listed, or may alternatively include other steps or elements inherent to such process, method, article, or apparatus.
Reference herein to "an embodiment" means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment can be included in at least one embodiment of the application. The appearances of the phrase in various places in the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment, nor are separate or alternative embodiments mutually exclusive of other embodiments. It is explicitly and implicitly understood by one skilled in the art that the embodiments described herein can be combined with other embodiments.
The present application will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings and examples.
Referring to fig. 1, fig. 1 is a schematic structural diagram of an electronic atomization device according to an embodiment of the present disclosure. In the present embodiment, an electronic atomization device 100 is provided. The electronic atomisation device 100 may be used for atomisation of an aerosol-generating substrate. The electronic atomization device 100 includes an atomizer 1 and a main body 2 electrically connected to each other.
Wherein the nebulizer 1 is for storing an aerosol-generating substrate and nebulizing the aerosol-generating substrate to form an aerosol for inhalation by a user. The atomizer 1 can be used in various fields, such as medical treatment, beauty treatment, leisure smoking, etc.; in one embodiment, the atomizer 1 may be used in an electronic aerosolization device for atomizing an aerosol-generating substrate and generating an aerosol for inhalation by a smoker, as exemplified by leisure smoking in the following embodiments; of course, in other embodiments, the atomizer 1 can also be applied to a hairspray device for atomizing hairspray for hair styling; or to devices for treating upper and lower respiratory diseases, to nebulize medical drugs.
The specific structure and function of the atomizer 1 can be referred to the specific structure and function of the atomizer 1 according to any of the following embodiments, and the same or similar technical effects can be achieved, and are not described herein again.
The host 2 includes a battery (not shown) and a controller (not shown). The battery is used to provide electrical energy for operation of the atomiser 1 to enable the atomiser 1 to atomise an aerosol-generating substrate to form an aerosol; the controller is used for controlling the work of the atomizer 1. The main body 2 further includes a battery holder, an airflow sensor, and other elements.
The atomizer 1 and the host machine 2 can be integrally arranged or detachably connected, and can be designed according to specific requirements.
Referring to fig. 2, fig. 2 is a schematic structural diagram of an atomizer according to an embodiment of the present application.
The atomizer 1 includes a housing 10, an atomizing base 11, and a heat generating component 12. The housing 10 has a reservoir 13, an outlet channel 14, the reservoir 13 being for storing a liquid aerosol-generating substrate, the reservoir 13 being arranged around the outlet channel 14. The end of the shell 10 is also provided with a suction port 15, and the suction port 15 is communicated with the air outlet channel 14; specifically, a suction port 15 may be formed at one port of the air outlet passage 14. The housing 10 has a receiving chamber 16 on a side of the reservoir 13 facing away from the suction opening 15, and the atomizing base 11 is disposed in the receiving chamber 16. The atomization seat 11 includes an atomization top seat 111 and an atomization base seat 112. The atomization top seat 111 and the atomization base seat 112 are matched to form a containing cavity 113; that is, the atomizing base 11 has a housing chamber 113. The heating element 12 is disposed in the accommodating cavity 113, and is disposed in the accommodating cavity 16 together with the atomizing base 11.
The atomizing top seat 111 is provided with two fluid passages 114, specifically, the top wall of the atomizing top seat 111 is provided with two fluid passages 114, and the two fluid passages 114 are disposed at two sides of the air outlet channel 14. The fluid channel 114 has one end in communication with the reservoir 13 and the other end in communication with the receiving cavity 113, i.e. the fluid channel 114 communicates the reservoir 13 with the receiving cavity 113, so that the aerosol generating substrate in the reservoir 13 passes through the fluid channel 114 into the heating element 12. That is, the heating element 12 is in fluid communication with the reservoir 13, the heating element 12 being arranged to absorb and heat the atomised aerosol-generating substrate. The controller of the host 2 controls the heating element 12 to atomise the aerosol-generating substrate.
In this embodiment, the surface of the heating element 12 away from the liquid storage cavity 13 is an atomization surface, an atomization cavity 115 is formed between the atomization surface of the heating element 12 and the inner wall surface of the accommodating cavity 113, and the atomization cavity 115 is communicated with the air outlet channel 14. The atomizing base 112 is provided with an air inlet 116 to communicate the outside with the atomizing chamber 115. The outside air enters the atomizing cavity 115 through the air inlet 116, and the aerosol atomized by the heating component 12 enters the air outlet channel 14, and finally reaches the suction opening 15 to be sucked by the user.
The atomizer 1 further includes a conducting member 17, and the conducting member 17 is fixed to the atomizing base 112. The conductive member 17 has one end electrically connected to the heat generating component 12 and the other end electrically connected to the host 2, so that the heat generating component 12 can operate.
The atomiser 1 also comprises a seal cap 18. The sealing top cover 18 is arranged on the surface of the atomizing top base 111 close to the liquid storage cavity 13, and is used for sealing the liquid storage cavity 13, the atomizing top base 111 and the air outlet channel 14 to prevent liquid leakage. Optionally, the material of the seal cap 18 is silicone or viton.
Referring to fig. 3a, 3b and 3c, fig. 3a is a schematic structural view of a first embodiment of the heating element provided by the present application, fig. 3b is a schematic structural view of a second substrate in the heating element provided by fig. 3a as viewed from an atomizing surface side, and fig. 3c is a schematic structural view of a first substrate in the heating element provided by fig. 3a as viewed from a liquid-absorbing surface side.
The heat generating component 12 includes a first substrate 121 and a second substrate 122. The first substrate 121 has a first surface 1211 and a second surface 1212 which are oppositely arranged, wherein the first surface 1211 is a liquid absorption surface; the first substrate 121 has a plurality of first pores 1213, the first pores 1213 being for guiding the aerosol generating substrate from the first surface 1211 to the second surface 1212, i.e. the first pores 1213 are for guiding the aerosol generating substrate from the liquid absorbing surface to the second surface 1212. The second substrate 122 has a third surface 1221 and a fourth surface 1222 oppositely arranged, and the fourth surface 1222 is a fogging surface; the second substrate 122 has a plurality of second pores 1223, the second pores 1223 being for guiding the aerosol-generating substrate from the third surface 1221 to the fourth surface 1222, i.e. the second pores 1223 being for guiding the aerosol-generating substrate from the third surface 1221 to the nebulization face. Wherein the second surface 1212 is disposed opposite to the third surface 1221. The first substrate 121 and/or the second substrate 122 form a flow channel that communicates the first micro-hole 1213 and the second micro-hole 1223. As can be appreciated. The aerosol-generating substrate flows from the liquid-absorbing face to the atomising face under the influence of gravity and/or capillary forces.
Through the arrangement, the heating component 12 has high liquid supply capacity, and can avoid forming large bubbles on the liquid suction surface to block liquid supply through the flow channel, so that dry burning is avoided.
In this embodiment, the second surface 1212 and the third surface 1221 are spaced apart from each other to form a gap 123, and the gap 123 serves as the flow channel; that is, the second surface 1212 of the first substrate 121 and the third surface 1221 of the second substrate 122 cooperate to form a flow channel. By forming the gap 123 between the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122, bubbles entering from the atomization surface during atomization can be eliminated, so that the formation of bubbles on the liquid absorption surface to block liquid supply is avoided, the bubbles are prevented from entering the liquid storage cavity 13 to block liquid supply, and dry burning is avoided.
The first substrate 121 may be a porous substrate, for example, a porous ceramic, cotton, quartz sand core, foam structured material; the first substrate 121 may also be a dense substrate. When the first substrate 121 is a dense substrate, the first substrate 121 is made of glass, dense ceramic or silicon. When the first substrate 121 is made of glass, it may be made of one of common glass, quartz glass, borosilicate glass, and photosensitive lithium aluminosilicate glass. In one embodiment, the first substrate 121 is borosilicate glass. In another embodiment, the first substrate 121 is a photosensitive lithium aluminosilicate glass.
The second substrate 122 may be a porous substrate, for example, a porous ceramic, cotton, quartz sand core, foam structured material; the second substrate 122 may also be a dense substrate. When the second substrate 122 is a dense substrate, the second substrate 122 is made of glass, dense ceramic or silicon. When the second substrate 122 is made of glass, it can be one of common glass, quartz glass, borosilicate glass, and photosensitive lithium aluminosilicate glass. In one embodiment, the second substrate 122 is borosilicate glass. In another embodiment, the second substrate 122 is a photosensitive lithium aluminosilicate glass.
The materials of the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 may be the same or different. Any combination of the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 is possible, for example, the first substrate 121 is a porous ceramic, and the second substrate 122 is a dense substrate; for another example, the first substrate 121 is a porous ceramic, and the second substrate 122 is a porous ceramic; for another example, the first substrate 121 is a dense substrate, and the second substrate 122 is a porous ceramic; for another example, the first substrate 121 is a dense substrate, and the second substrate 122 is a dense substrate.
The heating element 12 will be described in detail below by taking the first substrate 121 as a dense substrate and the second substrate 122 as a dense substrate.
The first substrate 121 is a dense substrate, and the first substrate 121 has a plurality of first micropores 1213 penetrating through the first surface 1211 and the second surface 1212. The second substrate 122 is a dense substrate, and the second substrate 122 has a plurality of second micro-holes 1223 penetrating through the third surface 1221 and the fourth surface 1222. Wherein the first micro-pores 1213 and the second micro-pores 1223 each have a capillary force. First micropores 1213 guide the aerosol-generating substrate from the liquid-absorbing surface of first substrate 121 to gap 123 by virtue of the capillary force thereof; the second micro-pores 1223 use their capillary force to direct the aerosol-generating substrate from the gap 123 to the atomising surface of the second substrate 122.
It will be appreciated that where the first substrate 121 is a porous ceramic, the first substrate 121 uses its own capillary force to direct the aerosol-generating substrate from the liquid-absorbing surface of the first substrate 121 to the gap 123; when the second substrate 122 is a porous ceramic, the second substrate 122 uses its own capillary force to direct the aerosol-generating substrate from the gap 123 to the atomising surface of the second substrate 122.
It is understood that the second substrate 122 is a dense substrate, and the second micro-holes 1223 penetrating through the third surface 1221 and the fourth surface 1222 are formed in the second substrate 122, so that the first micro-holes 1213 of the first substrate 121 are easier to be in fluid communication, which is beneficial to improving the liquid supply efficiency.
The height of the gap 123 is 200 μm or less, and the height of the gap 123 is the distance between the second surface 1212 and the third surface 1221. When the height of the gap 123 is greater than 200 μm, there is a risk of liquid leakage from the first micropores 1213 and/or the second micropores 1223, and there is a risk of bubbles laterally merging to grow. When the height of the gap 123 is too small, the gap 123 does not achieve a good removal of the air bubbles entering through the second micro-holes 1223. In one embodiment, the height of the gap 123 is 50 μm or less. In another embodiment, the height of the gap 123 is 20 μm or less.
By providing the gap 123, the liquid can be laterally replenished without affecting the liquid supply of the second substrate 122 even if bubbles adhere to the liquid suction surface of the first substrate 121 and cover a part of the first micro holes 1213. Further, the height of the gap 123 is set to the above range, which limits the range of the bubble growth, and it is difficult to form the bubble separated from the second micro-holes 1223, and the bubble is discharged from the atomizing surface when it is collapsed, thereby preventing the large bubble from adhering to the liquid suction surface of the first base 121 and affecting the liquid supply.
In the present embodiment, as shown in fig. 3b, the heat generating component 12 further includes a heat generating element 124, a positive electrode 128 and a negative electrode 129, and both ends of the heat generating element 124 are electrically connected to the positive electrode 128 and the negative electrode 129, respectively. The positive electrode 128 and the negative electrode 129 are each disposed on the atomizing surface of the second substrate 122 so as to be electrically connected to the host machine 2. The heating element 124 may be a heating sheet, a heating film, a heating net, or the like, and may be capable of heating the aerosol-generating substrate. The heating element 124 may be provided on the atomization surface of the second base 122, or may be embedded in the second base 122, and may be designed as needed. In another embodiment, the second substrate 122 has a conductive function, and may generate heat itself, for example, a self-heating conductive ceramic or a glass having a conductive function, and the heating element 124 is not required to be additionally provided. That is, the heat generating element 124 is an optional structure.
When the heating element 124 is an additional element, the projection of the first substrate 121 on the atomization surface completely covers the heating element 124, so as to ensure that the liquid supply speed can meet the atomization speed of the heating element 124, thereby achieving a better atomization effect.
Further, through set up first base member 121 in one side that second base member 122 is close to stock solution chamber 13, first base member 121 can insulate against heat to a certain extent, prevents that the heat conduction on the second base member 122 from reaching stock solution chamber 13, does benefit to the uniformity of guaranteeing the taste.
Referring to fig. 3b, in the present embodiment, a plurality of second micro-holes 1223 are disposed in an array arrangement on only a portion of the surface of the second substrate 122. Specifically, second substrate 122 is provided with a micropore array area 1224 and a margin area 1225 provided around the periphery of micropore array area 1224, micropore array area 1224 having a plurality of second micropores 1223; heating element 124 is disposed in micro-pore array area 1224 to heat the aerosolized aerosol-generating substrate; the positive electrode 128 and the negative electrode 129 are disposed in the margin 1225 of the atomization surface (the fourth surface 1222) to ensure stability of electrical connection of the positive electrode 128 and the negative electrode 129.
By providing the second substrate 122 with the micro-hole array area 1224 and the blank area 1225 disposed around the micro-hole array area 1224, it can be understood that the second micro-holes 1223 are not disposed on the blank area 1225, which reduces the number of the second micro-holes 1223 on the second substrate 122, thereby improving the strength of the second substrate 122 and reducing the production cost of disposing the second micro-holes 1223 on the second substrate 122. The micropore array area 1224 of the second substrate 122 serves as an atomizing area covering the heating element 124 and the area around the heating element 124, i.e., substantially covering the area up to the temperature of the aerosol-generating substrate, making full use of thermal efficiency.
It is to be understood that the area around the micro-hole array area 1224 of the second substrate 122 in the present application has a size larger than the aperture of the second micro-holes 1223, and is referred to as a margin area 1225; that is, the margin area 1225 in the present application is an area where the second micro-holes 1223 can be formed without forming the second micro-holes 1223, and is not an area around the micro-hole array area 1224 where the second micro-holes 1223 cannot be formed. In one embodiment, the spacing between second micro-holes 1223 nearest the perimeter of second substrate 122 and the perimeter of second substrate 122 is greater than the aperture of second micro-holes 1223 before it is considered that a whitespace 1225 is provided in the circumferential direction of micro-hole array area 1224.
Whether the first substrate 121 is provided with the first micropores 1213 over the entire surface or only a part of the surface may be designed as desired. Alternatively, referring to fig. 3c, the first substrate 121 is provided with a micropore array region 1214 and a margin region 1215 disposed around a circumference of the micropore array region 1214, and the micropore array region 1214 has a plurality of first micropores 1213.
The shapes of the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 may be flat, cylindrical, arc, etc., and are specifically designed as needed; the first base 121 and the second base 122 may be provided in a shape-fitting manner, and a gap 123 may be formed between the first base 121 and the second base 122. For example, fig. 3a provides a heating element 12 having a first substrate 121 and a second substrate 122 both in the form of flat plates. The first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 may be the same or different in shape and size. In this embodiment, as shown in fig. 3a, the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 have the same shape and size, and the projections are completely overlapped.
The first and second substrates 121 and 122 may be provided in a regular shape, such as a rectangular plate shape, a circular plate shape, or the like. A plurality of first micropores 1213 disposed on the first substrate 121 are arranged in an array; that is, the first micropores 1213 disposed on the first substrate 121 are regularly arranged, and the center-to-center distances between adjacent first micropores 1213 of the first micropores 1213 are the same. A plurality of second micro-pores 1223 disposed on the second substrate 122 in an array; that is, the plurality of second micro-holes 1223 disposed on the second substrate 122 are regularly arranged, and the center-to-center distances between adjacent second micro-holes 1223 of the plurality of second micro-holes 1223 are the same.
The extending direction of the first micropores 1213 may be parallel to the thickness direction of the first substrate 121, or may form an angle with the thickness direction of the first substrate 121, where the angle is in a range of 80 degrees to 90 degrees. The first micropores 1213 may have a circular cross-section and a rectangular longitudinal section. The extending direction of the second micro-holes 1223 may be parallel to the thickness direction of the second substrate 122, or may form an included angle with the thickness direction of the second substrate 122, where the included angle ranges from 80 degrees to 90 degrees. The second micro-holes 1223 may have a circular cross-section, a rectangular longitudinal cross-section, or the like. The longitudinal sectional shapes of the first and second micro-holes 1213 and 1223 and the extending directions thereof may be designed as desired. In this embodiment, the first micropores 1213 and the second micropores 1223 are both through holes parallel to the thickness direction of the first substrate 121 or the second substrate 122; that is, a central axis of the first micro-hole 1213 is perpendicular to the first surface 1211, and a central axis of the second micro-hole 1223 is perpendicular to the third surface 1221.
In this embodiment, the projection of the area of the first substrate 121 on which the first micro holes 1213 are disposed on the second substrate 122 completely covers the area of the second substrate 122 on which the second micro holes 1223 are disposed, so as to ensure that the liquid supply speed can meet the atomizing speed of the heating element 124 disposed on the atomizing surface of the second substrate 122, thereby achieving a better atomizing effect.
The first micropores 1213 of the first substrate 121 have a pore size of 1 μm to 100. mu.m. When the pore diameter of the first micropores 1213 is less than 1 μm, the liquid supply requirement cannot be satisfied, resulting in a decrease in the amount of aerosol; when the pore diameter of the first micropores 1213 is larger than 100 μm, the aerosol-generating substrate easily flows out of the first micropores 1213 to cause liquid leakage, resulting in a decrease in atomization efficiency. It is understood that the pore size of the first substrate 121 is selected according to actual requirements.
The pore size of the second micro-pores 1223 on the second substrate 122 is 1 μm to 100. mu.m. When the pore diameter of the second micro-pores 1223 is smaller than 1 μm, the liquid supply requirement cannot be satisfied, resulting in a decrease in the amount of aerosol; when the pore diameter of the second fine pores 1223 is larger than 100 μm, the aerosol-generating substrate easily flows out of the second fine pores 1223 to cause leakage of liquid, resulting in a decrease in atomization efficiency. Alternatively, the pore size of the second micro-pores 1223 is 20 μm to 50 μm. It is understood that the pore size of the second substrate 122 is selected according to actual requirements.
Optionally, the pore size of first pores 1213 is larger than the pore size of second pores 1223 (as shown in fig. 3 a) such that the capillary force of second pores 1223 is larger than the capillary force of first pores 1213 and aerosol-generating substrate is able to flow from gap 123 to the aerosolizing surface of second substrate 122. Since the first micropores 1213 also have capillary force, the liquid can be prevented from flowing backward and from being insufficiently supplied when the suction port 15 is used in a downward direction.
The thickness of the second substrate 122 is 0.1mm to 1 mm. When the thickness of the second substrate 122 is greater than 1mm, the liquid supply requirement cannot be met, so that the aerosol amount is reduced, the heat loss is large, and the cost for arranging the second micropores 1223 is high; when the thickness of the second substrate 122 is less than 0.1mm, the strength of the second substrate 122 cannot be ensured, which is not beneficial to improving the performance of the electronic atomization device. Optionally, the thickness of the second substrate 122 is 0.2mm to 0.5 mm. It will be appreciated that the thickness of the second substrate 122 is selected according to actual requirements.
The thickness of the first substrate 121 is 0.1mm to 1 mm. Optionally, the thickness of the first substrate 121 is smaller than that of the second substrate 122, wherein the thickness of the first substrate 121 is a distance between the first surface 1211 and the second surface 1212, and the thickness of the second substrate 122 is a distance between the third surface 1221 and the fourth surface 1222.
The ratio of the thickness of the second matrix 122 to the pore size of the second micro-pores 1223 is 20:1 to 3:1 to improve the liquid supply capacity. When the ratio of the thickness of the second substrate 122 to the pore diameter of the second fine pores 1223 is greater than 20:1, the aerosol-generating substrate supplied by the capillary force of the second fine pores 1223 is difficult to satisfy the atomization demand of the heating element 124, not only is dry burning easily caused, but also the amount of aerosol generated by a single atomization is reduced; when the ratio of the thickness of the second matrix 122 to the pore size of the second pores 1223 is less than 3:1, the aerosol-generating substrate is easily discharged from the second pores 1223 to cause waste, resulting in a decrease in atomization efficiency and thus a decrease in the total aerosol amount. Optionally, the ratio of the thickness of the second matrix 122 to the pore size of the second micro-pores 1223 is 15:1 to 5: 1.
The ratio of the center distance between two adjacent second micropores 1223 to the aperture of the second micropores 1223 is 3:1-1.5:1, so that the strength of the second matrix 122 is improved as much as possible on the premise that the second micropores 1223 on the second matrix 122 meet the liquid supply capability; optionally, the ratio of the hole center distance between two adjacent second micro-holes 1223 to the hole diameter of the second micro-holes 1223 is 3:1-2: 1; further alternatively, the ratio of the center-to-center distance between two adjacent second micro-holes 1223 to the pore diameter of the second micro-holes 1223 is 3:1 to 2.5: 1.
In this embodiment, the heat generating component 12 further includes spacers 125. The spacer 125 is disposed between the second surface 1212 of the first substrate 121 and the third surface 1221 of the second substrate 122 and located at an edge of the first substrate 121 and/or the second substrate 122, so that the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 are spaced apart to form the gap 123.
In one embodiment, the height of the gap 123 is the same along a direction parallel to the first substrate 121; that is, the second surface 1212 is disposed in parallel with the third surface 1221. For example, two equal-height spacers 125 are disposed between the second surface 1212 and the third surface 1221, and the two equal-height spacers 125 are located at the edges of the opposite ends of the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 (as shown in fig. 3 a); or an annular spacer 125, such as a rubber frame, having the same height is disposed between the second surface 1212 and the third surface 1221.
Referring to fig. 3d, fig. 3d is a schematic structural diagram of another embodiment of a spacer in the heat generating component shown in fig. 3 a.
In another embodiment, the height of the gap 123 gradually increases along a direction parallel to the first substrate 121; for example, the height of the gap 123 is gradually increased along the length direction, the width direction, or the diagonal direction of the first base 121. That is, the second surface 1212 and the third surface 1221 are disposed non-parallel. Alternatively, the height of the gap 123 gradually increases from zero, for example, only one spacer 125 is disposed between the second surface 1212 and the third surface 1221, the spacer 125 is located at the edge of one end of the first base 121 and the second base 122 (as shown in fig. 3 d), and the edge of the other end of the first base 121 and the second base 122 is in contact. For another example, two spacers 125 of different heights are located at the edges of the opposite ends of the first and second substrates 121 and 122. By arranging the gap 123 with uneven height, the liquid between the gap 123 can easily flow transversely between the gaps 123, so that the bubbles in the gap 123 can be prevented from blocking the ports of the first micropores 1213 or the second micropores 1223, the bubbles can be better discharged, and the influence of the bubbles on the liquid supply speed is reduced.
The structure of the spacer 125 in the case where the height of the gap 123 is the same in the direction parallel to the first substrate 121 will be described in detail below.
Specifically, when the projection of the first substrate 121 on the second substrate 122 completely coincides with the second substrate 122, that is, the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 have completely the same structure and size, the spacer 125 is located at the edge of the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 (as shown in fig. 3 a). When the projection of the first substrate 121 on the second substrate 122 completely covers the second substrate 122, that is, the size of the first substrate 121 is larger than that of the second substrate 122, the spacer 125 is located at the edge of the second substrate 122 and at a side of the first substrate 121 close to the side. When the projection of the second substrate 122 on the first substrate 121 completely covers the first substrate 121, that is, the size of the second substrate 122 is larger than that of the first substrate 121, the spacer 125 is located at the edge of the first substrate 121 and at a side of the second substrate 122. That is, the position where the spacer 125 is disposed may be determined according to the specific size of the first base 121 and the second base 122, and the first base 121, the second base 122, and the spacer 125 may be disposed so as to surround the gap 123.
Wherein the spacers 125 may be arranged along the circumference of the first and second substrates 121, 122, i.e. the spacers 125 are of an annular configuration, to avoid escape of aerosol-generating substrate in the gap 123. The spacers 125 may be provided in plurality and spaced apart along the circumferential direction of the first and second base bodies 121 and 122, and the circumferential direction of the first and second base bodies 121 and 122 may be sealed by the seal 126.
In one embodiment, the spacer 125 is a separately installed spacer, which is detachably connected to the first base 121 and the second base 122, and the spacer has a ring structure. The specific operation is as follows: first micro-holes 1213 are formed on the first substrate 121, second micro-holes 1223 are formed on the second substrate 122, and then a spacer is disposed between the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122, specifically, between the margin 1215 of the first substrate 121 and the margin 1225 of the second substrate 122. For example, the spacers 125 may be a silicone frame or a plastic frame.
In another embodiment, the spacer 125 is a support pillar or a support frame fixed on the second surface 1212 of the first substrate 121 and/or the third surface 1221 of the second substrate 122, and the support pillar or the support frame is fixed on the second surface 1212 of the first substrate 121 and/or the third surface 1221 of the second substrate 122 by fastening or welding. The specific operation is as follows: first micropores 1213 are formed on the first substrate 121, second micropores 1223 are formed on the second substrate 122, and then the support posts or the support frames are integrated with the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 by welding or fastening. For example, the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 are glass plates, glass frit is coated on the edge of the first substrate 121, and then the glass frit is sintered into glass by laser after covering the second substrate 122 to fix the supporting pillars or frames to the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122.
In yet another embodiment, the spacers 125 are protrusions integrally formed with the first base 121 and/or the second base 122. If the spacer 125 is a protrusion integrally formed with the first substrate 121, the first micro-hole 1213 is formed on the first substrate 121, the second micro-hole 1223 is formed on the second substrate 122, and then the second substrate 122 is attached to the protrusion to form the gap 123. If the spacer 125 is a protrusion integrally formed with the second substrate 122, the first micro-hole 1213 is formed on the first substrate 121, the second micro-hole 1223 is formed on the second substrate 122, and then the first substrate 121 is attached to the protrusion to form the gap 123. For example, a groove is etched on the second surface 1212 of the first substrate 121, the sidewall of the groove serves as the spacer 125, and the first micro-hole 1213 is formed on the bottom wall of the groove; the third surface 1221 of the second base 122 is a plane, the third surface 1221 of the second base 122 overlaps the side wall end surface of the groove of the second surface 1212, that is, the third surface 1221 of the second base 122 is attached to the second surface 1212 of the first base 121, and the third surface 1221 and the groove cooperate to form the gap 123. If the bottom surface of the groove is interpreted as the second surface 1212, the sidewall of the groove may be interpreted as a protrusion of the second surface 1212.
The heat-generating component 12 further includes a seal 126, the seal 126 having a lower fluid bore 1261, the lower fluid bore 1261 being in fluid communication with the fluid reservoir 13 via the fluid passage 114. The first substrate 121 and/or the second substrate 122 are embedded in the lower liquid hole 1261, that is, the sealing member 126 is used for sealing the periphery of the first substrate 121 and/or the second substrate 122 to prevent liquid leakage. Optionally, first substrate 121 and second substrate 122 are disposed in lower fluid bore 1261. When the sealing member 126 covers the periphery of the second substrate 122, the sealing member 126 does not shield the heat generating element 124, and the lower liquid hole 1261 can completely expose the heat generating element 124. In this embodiment, the hole wall of the lower fluid hole 1261 has an annular mounting groove (not shown), and the edge of the first base 121 and/or the second base 122 is embedded in the annular mounting groove.
Referring to fig. 4, fig. 4 is a schematic structural diagram of a heating element according to a second embodiment of the present application.
The second embodiment of the heat generating component 12 differs from the first embodiment of the heat generating component 12 in that: the gap 123 between the first base 121 and the second base 122 is maintained by the spacer 125 in the first embodiment of the heat generating component 12, and the gap 123 between the first base 121 and the second base 122 is maintained by the seal member 126 in the second embodiment of the heat generating component 12 without providing a special spacer 125. The second embodiment of the heating element 12 is different from the first embodiment of the heating element 12 in the manner of maintaining the gap 123, and the arrangement of other structures is the same as that of the first embodiment of the heating element 12, and is not described again.
In the second embodiment of the heat generating component 12, the hole wall of the lower liquid hole 1261 of the sealing member 126 is provided with a fixing structure 1261a to fix the first substrate 121 and/or the second substrate 122 and to space the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 to form the gap 123. The fixing structure 1261a is specifically provided as follows.
In one embodiment, a first mounting groove 1261b and a second mounting groove 1261c are spaced apart from each other on a wall of the lower fluid bore 1261, the first mounting groove 1261b and the second mounting groove 1261c are both annular grooves, and the first mounting groove 1261b and the second mounting groove 1261c serve as the fixing structure 1261 a. The first mounting groove 1261b and the second mounting groove 1261c have a common sidewall. The periphery of the first base 121 is inserted into the first mounting groove 1261b, the periphery of the second base 122 is inserted into the second mounting groove 1261c, and the sidewall shared by the first mounting groove 1261b and the second mounting groove 1261c keeps the first base 121 and the second base 122 spaced apart from each other and forms a gap 123 therebetween (as shown in fig. 4).
Referring to fig. 5a and 5b, fig. 5a is a schematic structural diagram of another embodiment of a sealing member in a second embodiment of a heat generating component provided in the present application, and fig. 5b is a schematic structural diagram of an assembly of the sealing member provided in fig. 5a and a first and a second substrate.
In one embodiment, the lower fluid hole 1261 includes a first sub-lower fluid hole 1261d and a second sub-lower fluid hole 1261e that are communicated with each other, the diameter of the first sub-lower fluid hole 1261d is larger than that of the second sub-lower fluid hole 1261e, so that a step structure a is formed between the first sub-lower fluid hole 1261d and the second sub-lower fluid hole 1261e, and an annular protrusion B is disposed on the wall of the second sub-lower fluid hole 1261 e. The step structure a and the annular projection B serve as a fixing structure 1261 a. The periphery of the first base 121 is lapped on the step surface of the step structure, that is, the periphery of the first base 121 is lapped on the connecting surface of the first sub-lower liquid hole 1261d and the second sub-lower liquid hole 1261 e; the periphery of the second base 122 overlaps the annular protrusion B, and a gap 123 is formed between the first base 121 and the second base 122. It is understood that the second base 122 may be fixed and the gap 123 may be formed by an interference fit between the second base 122 and the second sub-lower fluid hole 1261 e.
Referring to fig. 6a and 6b, fig. 6a is a schematic structural diagram of another embodiment of a sealing member in a second embodiment of a heat generating component provided in the present application, and fig. 6b is a schematic structural diagram of an assembly of the sealing member provided in fig. 6a and a first and a second substrate.
In one embodiment, a protrusion 1261f is provided on a wall of the lower fluid bore 1261 of the seal 126 to form a first step structure C and a second step structure D. The protrusion 1261f is of unitary construction with the seal 126. The first step structure C and the second step structure D serve as a fixing structure 1261 a. The first base 121 is disposed on the step surface of the first step structure C, the second base 122 is disposed on the step surface of the second step structure D, and a gap 123 is formed between the first base 121 and the second base 122.
Referring to fig. 7a and 7b, fig. 7a is a schematic structural diagram of a third embodiment of a heating element provided in the present application, and fig. 7b is a schematic partial structural diagram of the second substrate of the heating element provided in fig. 7a, as viewed from a third surface side.
The third embodiment of the heat generating component 12 differs from the first embodiment of the heat generating component 12 in that: the first substrate 121 and/or the second substrate 122 form flow channels in different manners, and the other structures are the same as those of the first embodiment of the heat generating assembly 12, and are not described again.
Unlike the first embodiment of the heat generating component 12, the flow passage is formed by the gap 123, in the third embodiment of the heat generating component 12, a plurality of first grooves 1221a extending in the first direction and a plurality of second grooves 1221b extending in the second direction are provided in the third surface 1221, the first grooves 1221a are arranged to intersect with the second grooves 1221b, and the plurality of first grooves 1221a and the plurality of second grooves 1221b form the flow passage described above. In this embodiment, the first direction is perpendicular to the second direction.
It is understood that in other embodiments, only a plurality of first grooves 1221a extending in the first direction or only a plurality of second grooves 1221b extending in the second direction may be provided, that is, adjacent second micro-holes 1223 may be communicated only in one direction. The first grooves 1221a and/or the second grooves 1221b have a capillary action that guides the aerosol-generating substrate in a lateral direction such that the aerosol-generating substrate is evenly distributed into the plurality of second pores 1223, thereby providing lateral fluid replacement. The lateral direction refers to a direction not parallel to the extending direction of the second micro-holes 1223, for example, a direction perpendicular to the central axis of the second micro-holes 1223.
Further, through set up intercrossing's first recess 1221a and second recess 1221b at third surface 1221, no matter first base 121 and second base 122 contact, or first base 121 and second base 122 interval set up, the second micropore 1223 that first base 121 will be on the second base 122 of homoenergetic avoiding covers, guarantees that aerosol generation matrix can flow to the atomizing face, avoids dry combustion. And the first and second grooves 1221a, 1221b may also enable lateral rehydration of the aerosol-generating substrate, further avoiding dry burning.
The plurality of second micro-holes 1223 are distributed in an array, each first groove 1221a corresponds to one or more rows of second micro-holes 1223, each second groove 1221b corresponds to one or more columns of second micro-holes 1223, and the design is specifically performed according to needs. In the present embodiment, each first groove 1221a corresponds to a row of second micro-holes 1223, and each second groove 1221b corresponds to a column of second micro-holes 1223 (as shown in fig. 7 b).
The ratio of the depth to the width of the first grooves 1221a is 0 to 20; when the ratio of the depth to the width of the first groove 1221a is greater than 20, the capillary force of the first groove 1221a cannot achieve a good lateral fluid infusion effect. In one embodiment, the ratio of the depth to the width of the first grooves 1221a is 1-5.
The ratio of the depth to the width of the second grooves 1221b is 0 to 20; when the ratio of the depth to the width of the second grooves 1221b is greater than 20, the capillary force of the second grooves 1221b cannot achieve a good lateral fluid infusion effect. In one embodiment, the second grooves 1221b have a depth to width ratio of 1 to 5.
Referring to fig. 7c, fig. 7c is a partial structural schematic view of the first substrate of the heating element provided in fig. 7a, as viewed from the second surface side.
Further, a plurality of third grooves 1212a extending along the third direction and a plurality of fourth grooves 1212b extending along the fourth direction are provided on the second surface 1212, and the third grooves 1212a and the fourth grooves 1212b are arranged in an intersecting manner; the first grooves 1221a, the second grooves 1221b, the third grooves 1212a, and the fourth grooves 1212b form the flow passages. In the present embodiment, the third direction is perpendicular to the fourth direction; the third direction is the same as the first direction, and the fourth direction is the same as the second direction.
It is understood that in other embodiments, only a plurality of third grooves 1212a extending in the third direction or only a plurality of fourth grooves 1212b extending in the fourth direction may be provided, i.e., communicating adjacent first micropores 1213 in only one direction. The third grooves 1212a and/or the fourth grooves 1212b have a capillary action that may guide the aerosol-generating substrate in a lateral direction, such that the aerosol-generating substrate uniformly enters the plurality of second pores 1223, thereby performing a lateral fluid replacement function.
The plurality of first micropores 1213 are distributed in an array, each third groove 1212a corresponds to one or more rows of first micropores 1213, and each fourth groove 1212b corresponds to one or more columns of first micropores 1213, which is specifically designed according to the needs. In this embodiment, each third groove 1212a corresponds to a row of first micro-holes 1213 and each fourth groove 1212b corresponds to a column of first micro-holes 1213 (as shown in FIG. 7 c).
The ratio of the depth to the width of the third groove 1212a is 0-20; when the ratio of the depth to the width of the third groove 1212a is greater than 20, the capillary force of the third groove 1212a cannot achieve a good lateral fluid infusion effect. In one embodiment, the third groove 1212a has a depth to width ratio ranging from 0 to 5.
The ratio of the depth to the width of the fourth groove 1212b is 0-20; when the ratio of the depth to the width of the fourth groove 1212b is greater than 20, the capillary force of the fourth groove 1212b cannot achieve a good lateral fluid infusion effect. In one embodiment, the fourth groove 1212b has a depth to width ratio of 0-5.
The capillary force of the first grooves 1221a and the second grooves 1221b on the third surface 1221 is larger than the capillary force of the third grooves 1212a and the fourth grooves 1212b on the second surface 1212.
It is understood that the third and fourth grooves 1212a, 1212b on the second surface 1212 are optional structures and may be designed as desired.
In an embodiment, the gap 123 is formed between the second surface 1212 and the third surface 1221 at an interval (as shown in fig. 7 a), specifically, the gap 123 may be formed by the spacer 125 (see the first embodiment of the heat generating component 12), or the gap 123 may be formed by the sealing member 126 (see the second embodiment of the heat generating component 12), which is not described again. That is, the gap 123, the plurality of first recesses 1221a, and the plurality of second recesses 1221b collectively form a flow passage; or a flow passage formed by the gap 123, the plurality of first recesses 1221a, the plurality of second recesses 1221b, the plurality of third recesses 1212a, and the plurality of fourth recesses 1212 b. Wherein the height of the gap 123 is the distance between the second surface 1212 and the third surface 1221.
At this time, the third and fourth grooves 1212a and 1212b on the second surface 1212 are optional structures; when the plurality of intersecting third grooves 1212a and fourth grooves 1212b are provided on the second surface 1212, the liquid storage amount of the gap 123 can be increased. The primary function of the first substrate 121 is to feed liquid and block bubbles. Wherein, along the direction parallel to the first substrate 121, the height of the gap 123 may be the same or may gradually increase; when the height of the gap 123 is gradually increased in a direction parallel to the first substrate 121, the capillary force of the gap 123 is gradually increased in a direction in which the height of the gap 123 is gradually decreased, facilitating the flow of aerosol-generating substrate in the gap 123, preventing gas bubbles from being trapped in the gap 123, i.e. the non-uniform gap 123 may further facilitate the lateral flow of aerosol-generating substrate in the gap 123, thereby better laterally replenishing and discharging gas bubbles.
Because the first grooves 1221a and the second grooves 1221b have capillary force, the liquid can be transversely replenished, the gas-liquid separation can be ensured by combining the gap 123, and the influence of bubbles on liquid supply is reduced. Also, by providing a plurality of intersecting first grooves 1221a and second grooves 1221b on the third surface 1221, guiding of aerosol-generating substrate in the gap 123 to the second micro-holes 1223 is facilitated, facilitating liquid supply. Specifically, during the pumping process, the gas enters the first groove 1221a and the second groove 1221b through the second micro holes 1223, and due to surface tension and the like, the gas bubbles tend to enter the gap 123, so that the first groove 1221a and the second groove 1221b are unblocked, and liquid supply is ensured; simultaneously, can prevent through clearance 123 that big bubble from reaching the imbibition face and then getting into stock solution chamber 13, the stock solution function of clearance 123 can guarantee to draw back at least two mouths and can not burn out.
Referring to fig. 8, fig. 8 is another schematic structural diagram of a heating element according to a third embodiment of the present application.
In another embodiment, the second surface 1212 is in contact with the third surface 1221 (as shown in fig. 8). That is, the plurality of first grooves 1221a, the plurality of second grooves 1221b, the plurality of third grooves 1212a, and the plurality of fourth grooves 1212b collectively form a flow path. Wherein the depth of the first groove 1221a and the depth of the second groove 1221b are both greater than the depth of the third groove 1212a and the depth of the fourth groove 1212 b; optionally, the ratio of the depth to the width of the first groove 1221a is 2 to 5, and the ratio of the depth to the width of the second groove 1221b is 2 to 5. It is understood that the depth of the first groove 1221a and the depth of the second groove 1221b are greater than the depth of the third groove 1212a and the depth of the fourth groove 1212b, and the capillary force of the first groove 1221a and the capillary force of the second groove 1221b are greater than the capillary force of the third groove 1212a and the capillary force of the fourth groove 1212 b. The depth of the first groove 1221a and the depth of the second groove 1221b cannot be too large, otherwise, a "delamination" phenomenon occurs during lateral fluid infusion, the flow speed of the fluid close to the bottom of the tank is fast, the flow speed of the fluid along the direction away from the bottom of the tank is slower and slower, the risk of air bubble blockage exists, and even the air bubble is blocked in the first groove 1221 a.
The plurality of intersecting third grooves 1212a and fourth grooves 1212b are formed in the second surface 1212, so that the amount of liquid stored between the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 can be increased, and the first substrate 121 can be prevented from blocking the second micro-holes 1223 when the first substrate 121 contacts the second substrate 122.
In other embodiments, the first micropores 1213 and the second micropores 1223 may be communicated in such a manner that the central axis of the first micropores 1213 coincides with the central axis of the second micropores 1223 or in such a manner that the ports of the first micropores 1213 and the second micropores 1223 at least partially coincide, so as to prevent the first matrix 121 from blocking the second micropores 1223 when the first matrix 121 and the second matrix 122 are in contact; at this time, it may not be necessary to provide a plurality of intersecting third and fourth grooves 1212a and 1212b on the second surface 1212.
Referring to fig. 9a, 9B, 9C, 9d and 9e, fig. 9a is a schematic top structure view of a fourth embodiment of a heating element provided in the present application, fig. 9B is a schematic cross-sectional view of the heating element provided in fig. 9a along a direction B-B, fig. 9C is a schematic cross-sectional view of the heating element provided in fig. 9a along a direction C-C, fig. 9d is a schematic structure view of another embodiment of a loading port in the fourth embodiment of the heating element provided in the present application, and fig. 9e is a schematic structure view of another embodiment of the loading port in the fourth embodiment of the heating element provided in the present application.
The fourth embodiment of the heat generating component 12 differs from the first embodiment of the heat generating component 12 in that: the edge of the first substrate 121 of the fourth embodiment of the heating element 12 has a liquid inlet 1217, and the other structures are the same as those of the first embodiment of the heating element 12, and are not described again.
In the fourth embodiment of the heat-generating component 12, at least a part of the edge of the first substrate 121 is spaced from the wall of the lower liquid hole 1261 of the sealing member 126 to form the liquid inlet 1217; alternatively, the edge of the first substrate 121 is provided with a notch 1216a or a through hole 1216b to form the inlet opening 1217. Second substrate 122 spans the entire lower fluid bore 1261.
Optionally, two opposite long sides of the first substrate 121 are spaced apart from the walls of the lower wells 1261 to form two symmetrically disposed inlets 1217 (as shown in fig. 9 a).
Optionally, a notch 1216a is formed on the edge of the first substrate 121, and the notch 1216a cooperates with the hole wall of the lower liquid hole 1261 to form a liquid inlet 1217; the size of the openings of the notches 1216a and the number thereof are designed as desired (as shown in FIG. 9 d).
Optionally, the edge of the first substrate 121 is provided with a through hole 1216b forming the liquid inlet 1217; the size, shape and number of through holes 1216b are designed as desired (as shown in FIG. 9 e).
The projection of the first substrate 121 on the atomization surface completely covers the heating element 124, and the liquid inlet 1217 and the heating element 124 are arranged in a staggered manner. The cross-sectional dimension of the liquid inlet 1217 is larger than the pore size of the first micro-pores 1213, i.e. the aerosol-generating substrate is discharged from the liquid inlet 1217 at a higher velocity than the first micro-pores 1213. Through set up inlet 1217 on first base member 121, not only can carry out the fluid infusion to clearance 123 through inlet 1217, can also get rid of the bubble through inlet 1217, avoid the bubble to get into the influence of stock solution chamber 13 to the confession liquid, and then avoid dry combustion method phenomenon.
It is understood that, in the fourth embodiment of the heat generating component 12, the fixing structure 1261a may be disposed on the hole wall of the lower liquid hole 1261 of the sealing member 126 to fix the first substrate 121 and/or the second substrate 122, and the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 are disposed at an interval to form the gap 123, which is referred to the second embodiment of the heat generating component 12 and will not be described again. The liquid inlet 1217 provided in the fourth embodiment of the heat-generating component 12 can also be applied to other embodiments of the heat-generating component 12, and is specifically designed according to the requirements.
Referring to fig. 10a, 10b, and 10c, fig. 10a is a schematic top structure view of a fifth embodiment of a heat generating assembly provided in the present application, fig. 10b is a schematic structure view of another embodiment of a liquid inlet in the fifth embodiment of the heat generating assembly provided in the present application, and fig. 10c is a schematic structure view of another embodiment of a liquid inlet in the fifth embodiment of the heat generating assembly provided in the present application.
The fifth embodiment of the heat generating component 12 differs from the first embodiment of the heat generating component 12 in that: the liquid inlet 1217 is disposed on one side of the edge of the first substrate 121 in the fifth embodiment of the heat-generating component 12, and the first micro-holes 1213 are not disposed on the first substrate 121, but other configurations are the same as those in the first embodiment of the heat-generating component 12, and are not described again.
In the fifth embodiment of the heat generating component 12, the first micropores 1213 are not provided on the first substrate 121. At least part of the edge of the first substrate 121 is spaced from the wall of the lower liquid hole 1261 of the sealing member 126 to form a liquid inlet 1217; alternatively, the edge of the first substrate 121 is provided with a notch 1216a or a through hole 1216b to form the inlet opening 1217. Second substrate 122 spans the entire lower fluid bore 1261.
Optionally, two opposite long sides of the first substrate 121 are spaced apart from the walls of the lower wells 1261 to form two symmetrically disposed liquid inlets 1217 (as shown in fig. 10 a).
Optionally, a notch 1216a is formed on the edge of the first substrate 121, and the notch 1216a cooperates with the wall of the lower liquid hole 1261 to form the liquid inlet 1217; the size and number of the openings of the notches 1216a are designed as desired (as shown in FIG. 10 b).
Optionally, the edge of the first substrate 121 is provided with a through hole 1216b forming the liquid inlet 1217; the size, shape and number of through holes 1216b are designed as desired (as shown in FIG. 10 c).
The projection of the first substrate 121 on the atomization surface completely covers the heating element 124, and the liquid inlet 1217 and the heating element 124 are arranged in a staggered manner. Through set up inlet 1217 on first base member 121, not only can carry out the fluid infusion to clearance 123 through inlet 1217, can also get rid of the bubble through inlet 1217, avoid the bubble to get into the influence of stock solution chamber 13 to the confession liquid, and then avoid dry combustion method phenomenon.
Referring to fig. 10d, fig. 10d is a schematic structural diagram of a heating element according to a sixth embodiment of the present application.
The sixth embodiment of the heat generating component 12 is different from the first embodiment of the heat generating component 12 in that: the heat generating component 12 further includes a plurality of micro-pillars 127, and the plurality of micro-pillars 127 are disposed in the gap 123. The sixth embodiment of the heating element 12 is different from the first embodiment of the heating element 12 except that a plurality of micro-pillars 127 are further disposed in the gap 123, and the arrangement manner of other structures is the same as that of the first embodiment of the heating element 12, and thus the description thereof is omitted.
Specifically, one end of the micropillar 127 abuts against the second surface 1212 of the first base 121, and the other end of the micropillar 127 is spaced from the third surface 1221 of the second base 122 (first mode); alternatively, one end of the micropillars 127 abuts against the third surface 1221 of the second base 122, and the other end of the micropillars 127 is spaced apart from the second surface 1212 of the first base 121 (second mode); alternatively, one end of the micropillar 127 abuts against the second surface 1212 of the first base 121, and the other end of the micropillar 127 abuts against the third surface 1221 of the second base 122 (third aspect).
The plurality of microcolumns 127 may be all in the first manner; the plurality of microcolumns 127 may be all of the second mode; the plurality of microcolumns 127 may be all of the third embodiment; the plurality of microcolumns 127 may be partially in the first mode, partially in the second mode, and partially in the third mode.
The microcolumns 127 may be waste generated when the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 are processed. For example, when the material of the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 is glass or silicon, the micro-pillars 127 may be micro-protrusions generated when the first substrate 121 and the second substrate 122 are perforated; when the material of the first and second substrates 121 and 122 is dense ceramic, the micro pillars 127 may be slag remaining after the first and second substrates 121 and 122 are perforated.
By providing the micro-pillars 127 in the gap 123, the aerosol-generating substrate, after entering the first micro-pores 1213, may crawl along the micro-pillars 127 into the gap 123, thereby perfectly filling the gap 123 with aerosol-generating substrate; liquid bridge-like action can be generated among the micro-columns 127, so that the action of transverse liquid supplement is realized, and the adhesion force between the aerosol generating substrate and the micro-columns 127 can increase the flow resistance and effectively prevent backflow.
It is understood that the structure of the heat generating component 12 in the sixth embodiment in which the plurality of micro-pillars 127 are disposed in the gap 123 may also be applied to other embodiments of the heat generating component 12, and is specifically designed as required.
Referring to fig. 11, fig. 11 is a schematic structural diagram of a seventh embodiment of a heat generating component according to the present application.
The seventh embodiment of the heat generating component 12 differs from the first embodiment of the heat generating component 12 in that: in the seventh embodiment of the heat generating element 12, the aperture of the first micro-holes 1213 becomes gradually larger along the thickness direction of the first substrate 121, the contraction openings of the first micro-holes 1213 are located at the first surface 1211, and the expansion openings of the first micro-holes 1213 are located at the second surface 1212. The seventh embodiment of the heat generating element 12 is the same as the first embodiment of the heat generating element 12 except that the longitudinal sectional shape of the first micro holes 1213 is different from that of the first embodiment of the heat generating element 12, and the arrangement of the other structures is not repeated.
By arranging the contraction port of the first micropore 1213 on the first surface 1211, the contraction port is communicated with the liquid storage cavity 13, and the expansion port is communicated with the gap 123, so that the liquid discharge stability of the first micropore 1213 on the first substrate 121 can be ensured, and the gap 123 can be fully filled; at the same time, this arrangement of the first micropores 1213 prevents the aerosol-generating substrate from flowing back from the gap 123 to the reservoir 13 and ensures that no gas can enter the reservoir 13 after aspiration has been completed.
In one embodiment, the first micropores 1213 are along the thickness direction of the first substrate 121, and the longitudinal section of the first micropores 1213 is trapezoidal. The following compares the longitudinal section of the first micropores 1213 with a rectangular shape and a trapezoidal shape.
It is understood that the arrangement of the first micro-holes 1213 in the seventh embodiment of the heat-generating component 12 can also be applied to other embodiments of the heat-generating component 12, and is specifically designed according to the needs.
Referring to fig. 12 to 14, fig. 12 is a schematic structural diagram of a first experimental part, fig. 13 is a schematic structural diagram of a second experimental part, and fig. 14 is a schematic structural diagram of a third experimental part.
The first test piece comprises a liquid collecting cavity 30 and a pipeline 31, and the longitudinal section of the pipeline 31 is rectangular.
The second experiment piece comprises a liquid collecting cavity 30 and a pipeline 31, wherein the longitudinal section of the pipeline 31 is trapezoidal, and a trapezoidal expansion port is communicated with the liquid collecting cavity 30.
The third experiment piece includes liquid collecting cavity 30 and pipeline 31, and the longitudinal section of pipeline 31 is trapezoidal, and trapezoidal shrink mouth communicates liquid collecting cavity 30.
Through experiments on the first, second and third test pieces, it was found that under the action of surface tension, the liquid was blocked in the pipeline 31 and the liquid level protruded downward at the opening of the pipeline 31 (see fig. 12-14). At the same level in the liquid collection chamber 30, the liquid level at the opening of the pipe 31 in the third test piece was found to protrude the most downward. Thus, the first micro-pores 1213 may be arranged such that the pore size of the first micro-pores 1213 gradually increases along the thickness direction of the first substrate 121, the contraction opening of the first micro-pores 1213 is located at the first surface 1211, and the expansion opening of the first micro-pores 1213 is located at the second surface 1212, so that the aerosol generating substrate protruding from the first micro-pores 1213 more easily contacts the surface of the second substrate 122, and the aerosol generating substrate communicates with the second micro-pores 1223 of the second substrate 122, thereby increasing the drainage speed.
The above embodiments are merely examples and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure, and all modifications, equivalents, and flow charts using the contents of the specification and drawings of the present disclosure or those directly or indirectly applied to other related technical fields are intended to be included in the scope of the present disclosure.
Claims (35)
1. A heat generating component, comprising:
the liquid absorption device comprises a first substrate, a second substrate and a liquid absorption layer, wherein the first substrate is provided with a first surface and a second surface which are oppositely arranged; the first substrate having a plurality of first pores for directing aerosol generating substrate from the liquid-absorbing surface to the second surface;
the second substrate is provided with a third surface and a fourth surface which are oppositely arranged, and the fourth surface is an atomization surface; the second surface is arranged opposite to the third surface; the second substrate is a dense substrate having a plurality of second pores extending through the third surface and the fourth surface, the second pores being configured to direct the aerosol-generating substrate from the third surface to the aerosolization surface;
wherein the first substrate and/or the second substrate form a flow channel, and the flow channel is communicated with the first micropore and the second micropore.
2. The heating element as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second surface and the third surface are spaced apart to form a gap, and the gap serves as the flow channel.
3. The heat-generating body assembly as described in claim 2, wherein the heat-generating assembly further comprises a spacer; the spacer is arranged between the second surface and the third surface and is positioned at the edge of the first base and/or the second base, so that the first base and the second base are arranged at intervals to form the gap.
4. The heat generating assembly of claim 3 wherein the spacers are independently disposed shims;
or, the spacer is a support column or a support frame fixed on the second surface and/or the third surface;
or, the spacer is a protrusion integrally formed with the first base and/or the second base.
5. The heat generating assembly of claim 2 further comprising a seal having a weep hole; and a fixing structure is arranged on the hole wall of the liquid discharge hole to fix the first base body and/or the second base body, so that the first base body and the second base body are arranged at intervals to form the gap.
6. The heat generating component of claim 2 wherein the gaps are of the same height along a direction parallel to the first substrate.
7. The heat-generating component of claim 2, wherein the gap gradually increases in height in a direction parallel to the first base heat-generating component.
8. The heat generating component of claim 7 wherein the gap increases in height from zero.
9. The heat generating component of claim 2 further comprising a plurality of micro-pillars disposed in the gap.
10. The heating element as claimed in claim 9, wherein one end of the micro-cylinder abuts against the second surface, and the other end of the micro-cylinder is spaced from the third surface;
or one end of the microcolumn is abutted against the third surface, and the other end of the microcolumn is arranged at an interval with the second surface;
or one end of the micro-column is abutted against the second surface, and the other end of the micro-column is abutted against the third surface.
11. The heating assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein the third surface is provided with a plurality of first grooves extending along a first direction and a plurality of second grooves extending along a second direction, the first grooves and the second grooves being arranged crosswise; the plurality of first grooves and the plurality of second grooves form the flow passage.
12. The heat-generating component of claim 11, wherein a plurality of the second micro-holes are arranged in an array, each of the first grooves corresponds to one or more rows of the second micro-holes, and each of the second grooves corresponds to one or more columns of the second micro-holes.
13. The heat-generating component of claim 11, wherein the first recess has a depth-to-width ratio of 0-20 and the second recess has a depth-to-width ratio of 0-20.
14. The heat generating assembly of claim 11, wherein the second surface is provided with a plurality of third grooves extending along a third direction and a plurality of fourth grooves extending along a fourth direction, and the third grooves and the fourth grooves are arranged in a crossed manner; the first grooves, the second grooves, the third grooves and the fourth grooves form the flow channel together.
15. The heat-generating component of claim 14 wherein the first matrix is a dense matrix, the first micro-holes extending through the first surface and the second surface; the plurality of first micropores are distributed in an array, each third groove corresponds to one or more rows of the first micropores, and each fourth groove corresponds to one or more columns of the first micropores.
16. The heat-generating component of claim 14, wherein the third groove has a depth-to-width ratio of 0-20 and the fourth groove has a depth-to-width ratio of 0-20.
17. The heat generating component of claim 14 wherein the capillary force of the first and second grooves is greater than the capillary force of the third and fourth grooves.
18. The heating assembly of any of claims 11-17 wherein the second surface is spaced apart from the third surface to form a gap.
19. The heating element as claimed in any one of claims 11 to 17 wherein said second surface is in contact with said third surface.
20. The heat-generating component of claim 19, wherein the depth of the first recess and the depth of the second recess are greater than the depth of the third recess and the depth of the fourth recess.
21. The heating element of claim 1 wherein a central axis of the second micro-hole is perpendicular to the third surface.
22. The heat-generating component according to claim 1, wherein the thickness of the second substrate is 0.1mm to 1mm, and the pore diameter of the second fine pores is 1 μm to 100 μm.
23. The heat-generating component according to claim 1, wherein a ratio of a thickness of the second substrate to a pore diameter of the second micro-pores is 20:1 to 3: 1.
24. The heat generating component of claim 1, wherein the ratio of the hole center distance of the adjacent second micro holes to the hole diameter of the second micro holes is 3:1-5: 1.
25. The heat-generating component of claim 1 wherein the first substrate is a dense substrate and the first micro-holes extend through the first surface and the second surface.
26. The heat-generating component of claim 25 wherein the capillary force of the second micro-holes is greater than the capillary force of the first micro-holes.
27. The heat-generating component according to claim 25, wherein the pore diameter of the first fine pores becomes gradually larger along the thickness direction of the first substrate; the constricting port of the first micropore is positioned on the first surface, and the expanding port of the first micropore is positioned on the second surface.
28. The heat-generating component of claim 25 wherein a projection of the area of the first substrate on which the first micro-holes are disposed on the second substrate completely covers the area of the second substrate on which the second micro-holes are disposed.
29. The heat-generating component of claim 25, wherein the first micro-holes have a pore size of 1 μ ι η to 100 μ ι η.
30. The heat-generating component of claim 1 wherein the thickness of the first substrate is less than the thickness of the second substrate.
31. The heating assembly as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a heating element, wherein the heating element is a separate element disposed on the atomizing surface; or the second substrate has a conductive function.
32. The heat-generating component of claim 31 wherein the projection of the first substrate onto the atomizing surface completely covers the heat-generating element.
33. A heat generating component, comprising:
the liquid absorption device comprises a first substrate, a second substrate and a liquid absorption layer, wherein the first substrate is provided with a first surface and a second surface which are oppositely arranged; the first substrate having a plurality of first pores for directing aerosol generating substrate from the liquid-absorbing surface to the second surface;
the second substrate is provided with a third surface and a fourth surface which are oppositely arranged, and the fourth surface is an atomization surface; the second surface is arranged opposite to the third surface; the second substrate having a plurality of second micro-pores for guiding the aerosol-generating substrate from the third surface to the atomising surface;
wherein the first substrate and/or the second substrate form a flow channel, and the flow channel is communicated with the first micropore and the second micropore.
34. An atomizer, comprising:
a reservoir for storing an aerosol-generating substrate;
a heating component in fluid communication with the reservoir chamber, the heating component for atomizing the aerosol-generating substrate; the heat-generating component of any of claims 1-33.
35. An electronic atomization device, comprising:
an atomizer according to claim 34;
a host for providing electrical energy for operation of the atomiser and for controlling the heating assembly to atomise the aerosol-generating substrate.
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CN202111656422.0A CN114794578A (en) | 2021-12-30 | 2021-12-30 | Heating element, atomizer and electronic atomization device |
PCT/CN2022/115306 WO2023124162A1 (en) | 2021-12-30 | 2022-08-26 | Heating assembly, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
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Cited By (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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WO2023124162A1 (en) * | 2021-12-30 | 2023-07-06 | 深圳麦克韦尔科技有限公司 | Heating assembly, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
WO2023124515A1 (en) * | 2021-12-30 | 2023-07-06 | 深圳麦克韦尔科技有限公司 | Heating assembly, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
WO2023125850A1 (en) * | 2021-12-30 | 2023-07-06 | 深圳麦克韦尔科技有限公司 | Heating body, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
WO2024050719A1 (en) * | 2022-09-07 | 2024-03-14 | 深圳麦克韦尔科技有限公司 | Heating assembly, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
WO2024093477A1 (en) * | 2022-11-02 | 2024-05-10 | 思摩尔国际控股有限公司 | Heater, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
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2021
- 2021-12-30 CN CN202111656422.0A patent/CN114794578A/en active Pending
Cited By (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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WO2023124162A1 (en) * | 2021-12-30 | 2023-07-06 | 深圳麦克韦尔科技有限公司 | Heating assembly, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
WO2023124515A1 (en) * | 2021-12-30 | 2023-07-06 | 深圳麦克韦尔科技有限公司 | Heating assembly, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
WO2023125850A1 (en) * | 2021-12-30 | 2023-07-06 | 深圳麦克韦尔科技有限公司 | Heating body, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
WO2024050719A1 (en) * | 2022-09-07 | 2024-03-14 | 深圳麦克韦尔科技有限公司 | Heating assembly, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
WO2024093477A1 (en) * | 2022-11-02 | 2024-05-10 | 思摩尔国际控股有限公司 | Heater, atomizer, and electronic atomization device |
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