US1856544A - Ozonizer - Google Patents

Ozonizer Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1856544A
US1856544A US250604A US25060428A US1856544A US 1856544 A US1856544 A US 1856544A US 250604 A US250604 A US 250604A US 25060428 A US25060428 A US 25060428A US 1856544 A US1856544 A US 1856544A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
casing
electrode
transformer
wall
tube
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US250604A
Inventor
Albert E Evans
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
COROZONE Co
Original Assignee
COROZONE Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by COROZONE Co filed Critical COROZONE Co
Priority to US250604A priority Critical patent/US1856544A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1856544A publication Critical patent/US1856544A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C01INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C01BNON-METALLIC ELEMENTS; COMPOUNDS THEREOF; METALLOIDS OR COMPOUNDS THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASS C01C
    • C01B13/00Oxygen; Ozone; Oxides or hydroxides in general
    • C01B13/10Preparation of ozone
    • C01B13/11Preparation of ozone by electric discharge
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C01INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C01BNON-METALLIC ELEMENTS; COMPOUNDS THEREOF; METALLOIDS OR COMPOUNDS THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASS C01C
    • C01B2201/00Preparation of ozone by electrical discharge
    • C01B2201/10Dischargers used for production of ozone

Definitions

  • This invention relates to ozonizers and has for its object the provision of a sim le, inexpensive, quiet' and practical electric device whereby ozone can be produced cheaply and reliably for purifying, disinfecting and deodorizing purposes in the toilet and sanitary rooms of hotels, oilice buildings, railway stations, steamships, public halls, theatres, and other places.
  • Fig. 1 is a vertical sectional view through a specimen ozonizer in place on a wall, corresponding to the line 1-1- in Fig. 2;
  • Fig. 2 is a horizontal sectional view on the line 22 of Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 3 is a perspective view of the apparatus showing the parts separated: and
  • Fig. 4 is a diagram of the magnetic and electric connections.
  • the casing of my improved ozonizer consists of a rectangular sheet metal box having a back 1. adapted to be secured in vertical position to a wall, a front 2 spaced therefrom, and vertical sides 3-3, here shown as outwardly-displaced at 4-4 to define inwardly-opening recesses for a pur-- pose hereinafter explained.
  • the inner faces of the walls 1 and 2 are here shown as covered by insulating layers 5 of any suitable material such as waxed paper.
  • the coils 9 and 10 are both spaced from the rear wall 1 of the casing and between said coils and said rear wall I interpose a narrow, flat-sided, elongated tube 13 of suitable insulating material such as mica wound in layers and suitably cemented together.
  • the upper and lower ends of this tube or flue are left open to enable the circulation of 'air and have free communication with suitable inlet apertures 14 in the bottom plate 15, and with a suitable screen-cloth-covered outlet openmg 16 in the top plate 17 with which said casing is provided.
  • Inside said tube I locate a rough surfaced sheet 18 of metal, so located relatively to the wall of the tube as to define therewith a passage-way for air.
  • the electrode 18 is preferably made of some oxidation-resisting metal such as aluminum and to secure the roughness desirable I have found nothing better than a piece of woven-wire-screen-cloth of this matcrial.
  • Other metals like brass, copper, iron, etc. can be employed, but these ordinarily become wasted away by the operation of the device, and frequently produce an acrid and unpleasant odor, from which aluminum and certain other of the oxidationresistihg metals are free.
  • Alternating current at 110 volts is supplied to the primary coil by way of the terminal wires 22.
  • the essential electric and magnetic connections are illustrated in Figure 4.
  • the screen cloth member 18 constitutes one electrode and the casing and its internal metal parts constitute the other electrode.
  • the surface of the electrode 18 becomes bathed with a dim, purplish-colored light which is apparently of the nature of the so-ca1led,corona discharge since it is quiet and noiseless.
  • Thermal circulation of the air through the tube '13 past this electrode causes the same to become sufficiently ozonized for the disinfecting and deodorizing purposes hereinbefore mentioned.
  • An ozone machine comprising: a casing; a transformer located in said casing with one side thereof slightly spaced from the corresponding wall of said casing; a flat tube of insulating material interposed between said side and said wall and open at its ends to permit'the passage of a current of air therethrough; an electrode disposed in saidtube; and connections connecting said electrode to a secondary terminal of said transformer.
  • An ozone machine comprising: a casing, acting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing; an electrode disposed within said casing; insulating material interposed between said electrode and said casing; and connections connecting said casing and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
  • An ozone machine comprising: a casing, acting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing, and having its core tightly in electrical contact with said casing; an electrode disposed within said casing; insulat- 5.
  • An ozone machine comprising: a casing,
  • a transformer located in said casing and having the two edges of its core tightly received within said grooves in tight electrical contact with said casing; an electrode disposed within said casing; insulating material interposed between said casing and said core on the one hand and said electrode on the other hand; and connections connecting said core and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
  • An ozone machine comprising: a casing, 2 ting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing with one side thereof slightly spaced from the corresponding wall of said casing; a fiat'tube of insulating material interpo'sed between said side and said wall and open at its ends to permit the passage of a current of air therethrough; an electrode disposed in said tube; and connections connecting said casing and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
  • An ozone machine comprising: a casing, acting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing with one side thereof slightly spaced from the corresponding wall of said casing, and with its core tightly in electrical contact with said casing; a flat tube of insulating material interposed between said side and said wall and open at its ends to permit the passage of a current of air therethrough; an electrode disposed in said tube; and connections connecting said core and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
  • An ozone machine comprising: a casing,
  • a transformer locatedv in said casing with its core tightly in electri: cal contact with two opposite walls of said casing and with one side thereof slightly spaced from another wall of said casing; a flat tube of insulating material interposed between said side and said other wall and open at its ends to permit the passage ofa current of air therethrough; an electrode disposed in said tube; and connections connecting said core and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
  • An ozone machine comprising: a casing, having longitudinal grooves on the interior of two opposite walls, and acting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing, having the two edges of its core tightly received within said grooves in tight electrical contact with said casing, and having one sidethereof slightly spaced from another wall of said casing; a fiat tube of insulating material interposed between said side and said other meat wall and open at its ends to permit-the assage of a current of air therethrough; an e eetrode disposed in said tube; and connections connecting said core and said electrode to the secondaryterminals of said transformer.
  • An ozone machine comprising: a transformer, a flat tube of insulating material, and a flat electrode, all interconnectable to provide a compact assembly of ozonizer parts; a casing, having opposed interior grooves, and a side wall spaced a predetermined distance from said grooves; said ozonizer assembly being insertable into said casing as a casing, having opposed interior grooves, and
  • said ozonizer assembly being insertable into said casing as a unit the transformer disposed and held by sai grooves, and the remaining portions of said assemblybeing interposed in the space between said transformer and said side wall, and cooperating with said side wall to provide mechanism operable to generate ozone.
  • An ozone fgenerator comprising a metal ing, a relatively flat insulating tube between the transformer and one wall of the casing, a substantially flat elongated electrode in said tube lying alongside said wall of the casing, the transformer having its terminals con nected one to said casing and one to said electrode.
  • a casing In an ozone generator, a casing, oppo site side walls thereof having outwardl extending grooves, a transformer, a core t erefor having side members pro'ecting laterall beyond the coils of the trans ormer and sli abl niounted in said grooves, an electrode, a dielectric element associated with said electrode and movable with said transformer into and out of said casin throughmne end thereof, and closures fort e ends of said casing.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Inorganic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Oxygen, Ozone, And Oxides In General (AREA)

Description

A. E. EVANS OZONI ZER Filed Jan. 30, 1928 I raven-tor- MM; Attorxqegs Patented ay 3, 1932 ALBERT E. EVANS, F CLEVELAND, OHIO, ASSIGNOR, BY MESNE ASSIGNMENTS, TO THE COBOZONE COMPANY, OF WILMINGTON, DELAWARE, A CORPORATION OF DELA- WARE OZONIZEB Application filed January 80, 1928. Serial No. 2503M.
This invention relates to ozonizers and has for its object the provision of a sim le, inexpensive, quiet' and practical electric device whereby ozone can be produced cheaply and reliably for purifying, disinfecting and deodorizing purposes in the toilet and sanitary rooms of hotels, oilice buildings, railway stations, steamships, public halls, theatres, and other places.
In the drawings accompanyin and forming a part of this application I ave shown one physical structure in which my invention is embodied, although it will be understood that these drawings are intended to be illustrative of principles rather thanexhaustive of the appliances by which the same can be utilized.
Fig. 1 is a vertical sectional view through a specimen ozonizer in place on a wall, corresponding to the line 1-1- in Fig. 2; Fig. 2 is a horizontal sectional view on the line 22 of Fig. 1; Fig. 3 is a perspective view of the apparatus showing the parts separated: and Fig. 4 is a diagram of the magnetic and electric connections.
In its preferredform the casing of my improved ozonizer consists of a rectangular sheet metal box having a back 1. adapted to be secured in vertical position to a wall, a front 2 spaced therefrom, and vertical sides 3-3, here shown as outwardly-displaced at 4-4 to define inwardly-opening recesses for a pur-- pose hereinafter explained. The inner faces of the walls 1 and 2 are here shown as covered by insulating layers 5 of any suitable material such as waxed paper.
Located inside this casing with its edges I tightly received in the recesses 4-4 is the rectentimes the number of turns as the primary 9 so as to increase the voltage from 110 volts to upwards of ten thousand volts. In addition to the cross members 7 and 8 of the transformer frame I have also shown a third, narrower cross member 12 for the purpose of se curing a small amount of magnetic leakage at all times, regardless of the demagnetizing effect of the winding 10, and thereby inducing a more powerful magnetism in the core frame.
The coils 9 and 10 are both spaced from the rear wall 1 of the casing and between said coils and said rear wall I interpose a narrow, flat-sided, elongated tube 13 of suitable insulating material such as mica wound in layers and suitably cemented together. The upper and lower ends of this tube or flue are left open to enable the circulation of 'air and have free communication with suitable inlet apertures 14 in the bottom plate 15, and with a suitable screen-cloth-covered outlet openmg 16 in the top plate 17 with which said casing is provided. Inside said tube I locate a rough surfaced sheet 18 of metal, so located relatively to the wall of the tube as to define therewith a passage-way for air. One terminal 19 of the secondary winding is connected to said sheet of metal, the wall of the tube being preferably slotted as shown at 20 to enable the ready introduction and removal of the electrode. The other terminal 21 of the secondary winding is suitably groun-ded'to the plate 1 of the casing, or other member electrically connected therewith. In the present embodiment this is eifected'by welding the terminal 21 to the frame.
The electrode 18 is preferably made of some oxidation-resisting metal such as aluminum and to secure the roughness desirable I have found nothing better than a piece of woven-wire-screen-cloth of this matcrial. Other metals like brass, copper, iron, etc. can be employed, but these ordinarily become wasted away by the operation of the device, and frequently produce an acrid and unpleasant odor, from which aluminum and certain other of the oxidationresistihg metals are free.
Alternating current at 110 volts is supplied to the primary coil by way of the terminal wires 22. The essential electric and magnetic connections are illustrated in Figure 4. The screen cloth member 18 constitutes one electrode and the casing and its internal metal parts constitute the other electrode. Upon energizing the transformer the surface of the electrode 18 becomes bathed with a dim, purplish-colored light which is apparently of the nature of the so-ca1led,corona discharge since it is quiet and noiseless. Thermal circulation of the air through the tube '13 past this electrode causes the same to become sufficiently ozonized for the disinfecting and deodorizing purposes hereinbefore mentioned. The cost of the apparatus is very small, its consumption of current is only nominal, the sanitary, therapeutic, germicidal, and deodorizing efiect "of ozone is much superior-to that of the oils and other chemical preparations customarily employed for these purposes, and the device requires no refilling, renewal, or attention.
It will be understood, however, that while I have described in detail the particular physical embodiment of my invention herein chosen for purposes of illustration, I do not limit myself to those details or to that physical embodimentin any wise except as specifically recited in my several claims which I desire may be constructed each independently of limitations contained in other claims.
Having thus described my invention what I claim is:
1. An ozone machine comprising: a casing; a transformer located in said casing with one side thereof slightly spaced from the corresponding wall of said casing; a flat tube of insulating material interposed between said side and said wall and open at its ends to permit'the passage of a current of air therethrough; an electrode disposed in saidtube; and connections connecting said electrode to a secondary terminal of said transformer.
2. An ozone machine comprising: a casing, having longitudinal grooves on the interior of two opposite walls; a transformer located in said casing with the two edges of its core tightly received within said grooves and with one side thereof slightly spaced from another wall of said casing; a flat tube of insulating material interposed between said side and said other wall and open at its ends to permit the passage of a current of air therethrough; an electrode disposed in said tube; and connections connecting said electrode to a secondary terminal of said transformer.
3. An ozone machine comprising: a casing, acting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing; an electrode disposed within said casing; insulating material interposed between said electrode and said casing; and connections connecting said casing and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
4. An ozone machine comprising: a casing, acting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing, and having its core tightly in electrical contact with said casing; an electrode disposed within said casing; insulat- 5. An ozone machine comprising: a casing,
having longitudinal grooves on the interior of two opposite walls, and acting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing and having the two edges of its core tightly received within said grooves in tight electrical contact with said casing; an electrode disposed within said casing; insulating material interposed between said casing and said core on the one hand and said electrode on the other hand; and connections connecting said core and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
6. An ozone machine comprising: a casing, 2 ting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing with one side thereof slightly spaced from the corresponding wall of said casing; a fiat'tube of insulating material interpo'sed between said side and said wall and open at its ends to permit the passage of a current of air therethrough; an electrode disposed in said tube; and connections connecting said casing and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
V 7. An ozone machine comprising: a casing, acting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing with one side thereof slightly spaced from the corresponding wall of said casing, and with its core tightly in electrical contact with said casing; a flat tube of insulating material interposed between said side and said wall and open at its ends to permit the passage of a current of air therethrough; an electrode disposed in said tube; and connections connecting said core and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
' 8. An ozone machine comprising: a casing,
acting as an electrode; a transformer locatedv in said casing with its core tightly in electri: cal contact with two opposite walls of said casing and with one side thereof slightly spaced from another wall of said casing; a flat tube of insulating material interposed between said side and said other wall and open at its ends to permit the passage ofa current of air therethrough; an electrode disposed in said tube; and connections connecting said core and said electrode to the secondary terminals of said transformer.
9. An ozone machine comprising: a casing, having longitudinal grooves on the interior of two opposite walls, and acting as an electrode; a transformer located in said casing, having the two edges of its core tightly received within said grooves in tight electrical contact with said casing, and having one sidethereof slightly spaced from another wall of said casing; a fiat tube of insulating material interposed between said side and said other meat wall and open at its ends to permit-the assage of a current of air therethrough; an e eetrode disposed in said tube; and connections connecting said core and said electrode to the secondaryterminals of said transformer.
. 10. An ozone machine comprising: a transformer, a flat tube of insulating material, and a flat electrode, all interconnectable to provide a compact assembly of ozonizer parts; a casing, having opposed interior grooves, and a side wall spaced a predetermined distance from said grooves; said ozonizer assembly being insertable into said casing as a casing, having opposed interior grooves, and
. casing, a trans Q j signature... 7
a side wall spaced a predetermined distance from said grooves; said ozonizer assembly being insertable into said casing as a unit the transformer disposed and held by sai grooves, and the remaining portions of said assemblybeing interposed in the space between said transformer and said side wall, and cooperating with said side wall to provide mechanism operable to generate ozone.
12. An ozone fgenerator comprising a metal ing, a relatively flat insulating tube between the transformer and one wall of the casing, a substantially flat elongated electrode in said tube lying alongside said wall of the casing, the transformer having its terminals con nected one to said casing and one to said electrode. v
13. In an ozone generator, a casing, oppo site side walls thereof having outwardl extending grooves, a transformer, a core t erefor having side members pro'ecting laterall beyond the coils of the trans ormer and sli abl niounted in said grooves, an electrode, a dielectric element associated with said electrode and movable with said transformer into and out of said casin throughmne end thereof, and closures fort e ends of said casing.
Intestimonywhereof I hereunto afiix my ALBERT E. EVANS.
ormer supported in the'cas-
US250604A 1928-01-30 1928-01-30 Ozonizer Expired - Lifetime US1856544A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US250604A US1856544A (en) 1928-01-30 1928-01-30 Ozonizer

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US250604A US1856544A (en) 1928-01-30 1928-01-30 Ozonizer

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1856544A true US1856544A (en) 1932-05-03

Family

ID=22948425

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US250604A Expired - Lifetime US1856544A (en) 1928-01-30 1928-01-30 Ozonizer

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1856544A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1989000975A1 (en) * 1987-08-03 1989-02-09 Philipp Leicher Ozone generating apparatus
US5413769A (en) * 1990-10-17 1995-05-09 Sumitomo Precision Products Co., Ltd. Clad fine wire electrode-type activated species-generating apparatus

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1989000975A1 (en) * 1987-08-03 1989-02-09 Philipp Leicher Ozone generating apparatus
US5413769A (en) * 1990-10-17 1995-05-09 Sumitomo Precision Products Co., Ltd. Clad fine wire electrode-type activated species-generating apparatus

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2650672A (en) Electrostatic precipitator
US2658868A (en) Ozone generator
US1856544A (en) Ozonizer
US2290376A (en) Ozonizing apparatus
US1845670A (en) Ozonizer
US1870616A (en) Ozonizer
US3089980A (en) Ballast apparatus for starting and operating electric discharge lamps
US2744865A (en) Ozone generator
KR910003701A (en) Generator for electric voltage generation
US2113913A (en) Ozonator
US2330312A (en) Starting and operating fluorescent and mercury arc lamps
US1875671A (en) Air purifier
US1402873A (en) Electric water heater
US2350842A (en) Ozonizer
US2253131A (en) Combined alternating-currentdirect-current transformer
US3567620A (en) Apparatus and processes for the manufacture of ozone
US2842491A (en) Ozone air purifier
US1874455A (en) Ozonizer
US2793184A (en) Electric zigzag labyrinth ozone generator
US1085579A (en) Ozone-generator.
US1505603A (en) Ozone apparatus
US724060A (en) Transforming system.
US1546855A (en) Stationary induction apparatus
JPH0418240Y2 (en)
US1814319A (en) Electric water heater