US20060211362A1 - Personalized air conditioning/ displacement ventilation system - Google Patents

Personalized air conditioning/ displacement ventilation system Download PDF

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Publication number
US20060211362A1
US20060211362A1 US11/415,638 US41563806A US2006211362A1 US 20060211362 A1 US20060211362 A1 US 20060211362A1 US 41563806 A US41563806 A US 41563806A US 2006211362 A1 US2006211362 A1 US 2006211362A1
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United States
Prior art keywords
air
chamber
air conditioning
ventilation system
displacement ventilation
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Abandoned
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US11/415,638
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Hans Levy
Peter Betz
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Individual
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Individual
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Priority claimed from US11/069,453 external-priority patent/US20060211361A1/en
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US11/415,638 priority Critical patent/US20060211362A1/en
Priority to CA 2556725 priority patent/CA2556725A1/en
Publication of US20060211362A1 publication Critical patent/US20060211362A1/en
Priority to US12/221,398 priority patent/US20090124188A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F13/00Details common to, or for air-conditioning, air-humidification, ventilation or use of air currents for screening
    • F24F13/02Ducting arrangements
    • F24F13/06Outlets for directing or distributing air into rooms or spaces, e.g. ceiling air diffuser
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F7/00Ventilation
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F7/00Ventilation
    • F24F7/007Ventilation with forced flow
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F2221/00Details or features not otherwise provided for
    • F24F2221/38Personalised air distribution

Definitions

  • the invention at hand relates to either heating or cooling the air in a large building, especially with a floor area having multiple persons working therein.
  • the invention is directed primarily to the personal comfort of a person working at a workstation including a desk by directing conditioned air to the immediate vicinity of the person or persons present at those workstations and by giving those persons control over the flow and direction of the conditioned air, and to providing displacement ventilation to the surrounding area.
  • air conditioning In the field of heating and cooling, generally known as “air conditioning”, there are known problems causing discomfort to the occupants in the building or a room. Inefficiencies in the system result in excessive operating costs in the operation of the building and problems in the operation and control of the present systems. Also present systems tend to have poor indoor air quality (IAQ).
  • IAQ indoor air quality
  • U.S. Pat. No. 374,424 discloses a system for supplying fresh air to the environment of an auditorium and wherein the air blows directly to the chair which is occupied by a person without any mechanical intervention or modification.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 1,194,527 shows the ventilation of a class room wherein the outside air under pressure enters the class room through a ventilated floor panel and is further distributed into a desk where the pupil is sitting.
  • the pupil may have some control over the amount of air flowing to or through the desk.
  • the air is not conditioned or modified as to heat or cold.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,140,829 describes an air conditioning system wherein there is a cooling of high ceiling rooms by providing a stratum of cooled and dehumidified air in the lower levels of the room up to the height of the occupants without considering the relatively large cost and the complications of treating all the air in the room.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,341,125 illustrates a way of ventilating a desk at a workstation by simply mounting a fan within the rear of the desk and by blowing air at the person and by giving the person working at the desk somewhat of a control of the fan by positioning the same or by controlling the speed of the air flow.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,507,643 teaches the ventilation of restaurant equipment by supplying air to and from restaurant table and their equipment. The person or persons seated at the equipment have no control over the flow and/or the direction of the flow of the air.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,672,120 shows a ventilated table having a fan mounted in a horizontal position which is emitting air in a horizontal direction and the air flows out of the lateral sides of the table.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,734,990 discloses a desk as a workstation having a combination fan and heater mounted therein.
  • the fan blows the conditioned air (heat) directly at the person sitting at the desk.
  • the direction of the air is adjustable by tilting the fan in one direction or the other and the level of the heat is adjustable by way of a rheostat.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,835,186 discloses an air conditioning system wherein there are upstanding air emitting columns receiving air through ducts in the floor of the system. It is considered to be a local or spot air conditioning system.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,877,990 discloses a novel building structure embodying a multi-cellular load supporting floor having an air distributing and an electrical wiring system therein wherein both the heated and cooled air and the electrical wiring are distributed through selected ones of the cells in the floor.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 3,322,056 teaches the elimination of duct work in a building by adding fan driven diffusers in the ceiling whereby the air in the chamber in the ceiling may be used as an unpressurized distribution chamber.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 3,516,347 shows the use of a double plenum air conditioning system which creates a space between a structural and the floor of the roof above the building and the double plenum is divided by a horizontal partition into an upper part and a lower plenum and a supply of air is fed to one of the plenums and return air is withdrawn form the other of the plenums.
  • the supply of air can be hot, cold or neutral.
  • Inlets and outlets connect the plenums through the slab to the room below or through the floor to the room above.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 4,035,018 discloses a system whereby conditioned air is distributed through a floor plenum to a multiple of chairs having exhausts connected to each of the chairs to expel the conditioned air into the general environment of the room. The occupants of the chairs have no control over the speed and the direction of the air flowing to the chairs.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 4,135,440 illustrates an air conditioning system, both ceiling and floor plenums and each of the plenums has individual air outlets diffusing into the room between the plenums.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 4,378,727 shows an open space office system including a plurality of freestanding workstations which are constructed of vertical panels and are removably mounted to an upper board member to direct cooling air to a user of the organization permitting its use in a convenient manner in various environments.
  • CIMADESK Another known prior art air conditioned workstation is known under the word “CLIMADESK”. It is described as a plenum which is installed under the top of the desk.
  • the air plenum has an inlet to receive conditioned air from an air conditioning unit being placed apart but adjacent to the desk.
  • the air conditioning unit receives fresh air from the outside of the building through an air intake vent.
  • the air plenum installed under the top surface of the desk directs conditioned air toward a person sitting at the desk.
  • the conditioned air is exiting toward the person by way of two front louvers and is further directed upwardly from the top surface of the desk in front of the person sitting at the desk.
  • the temperature of the conditioned air can be controlled by way of a thermostat located on a front panel of the desk.
  • German published specification (Offenlegungsschrift) No. 24 07 448 discloses a workstation in the form of a desk receiving conditioned air by way of a flexible hose through the floor having air ducts therein. The occupant at the desk has no control over the flow of the air with regard to direction and/or speed.
  • German published specification (Offenlegungsschrift) No. 27 19 670 discloses a similar system as was disclosed in the German publication above.
  • conditioned air is supplied by way of ducts located below the floor of the open office area. From there the conditioned air is funneled to upstanding tubes located at each of the workstations. The conditioned air is blown into the room at a location above the desk surface at each of the workstations. The occupant at the desk has some control over the direction and the speed of the air flowing through the outlets of the upstanding tubes.
  • German published application (Offenlegungsschrift) No. 29 38 702 is similar to both German publications discussed above and does not add any more knowledge to the already known prior art.
  • Japanese Patent No. 61-11535 discloses an air conditioning system having a floor plenum installed over a floor slab of a building.
  • the conditioned air is driven by a fan into a hollow partition situated over an opening in the floor.
  • Conditioned air may exit into the room at a higher elevation than the height of the desk.
  • An object of the invention is to present a system for distributing conditioned air throughout an office layout in a most efficient way.
  • a building whether large or small, for example, the control of temperature, air flow, humidity and the like, or even individual rooms and workstations leaves many persons in the building or within a room or in the vicinity of a workstation uncomfortable or dissatisfied with the condition of their particular environment. Different people have different levels of metabolism and therefore different comfort needs.
  • conventional air conditioning systems generally require expensive duct work and installations, usually in floors or ceilings or both, which cause unnecessary heating or cooling of unused space, particularly the spaces that surround the duct work and the spaces above the head level of the occupants.
  • duct work also imposes a substantial energy demand for the movement of air through the ducts and additionally presents difficulties in cleaning the ducts.
  • Prior art and known systems with fixed floor and/or wall mounted air outlet grilles limited the location of workstations, furniture and or equipment to positions at locations which would enhance the flow of air. Such prior art systems also created complaints of discomfort caused by high or low air velocities or high or low temperatures depending upon the location of the air outlet grilles. Also, air conditioning outlet grilles and the ducts associated therewith frequently need to be moved to accommodate changes in air conditioning loads or a rearrangement of the work space or the individual workstations in an open office layout, for example.
  • partitions creates an impediment to the flow of the conditioned air throughout the room. That is, conditioned air flows freely in the area above and around the workstations. However, within the workstations or between the room dividers or partitions there is no means for providing the workstation occupant with an acceptable flow of conditioned air. Therefore, the workers often become uncomfortable, or even ill, which in turn decreases productivity and/or causes absenteeism.
  • Conventional room dividers for workstations may supply conditioned air to workstations, which conditioned air flows through an air flow grille at about the height where the worker is seated but the worker has very little control over the flow of the air or its direction.
  • Such room dividers consist of a hollow space being created by panels that are spaced from each other by a predetermined distance to define an air flow there between.
  • the hollow room divider is placed on an opening in the floor which floor is spaced above the slab of the building which constitutes the building floor to thereby form a large or major air plenum. This air plenum, therefore, is formed by the slab of the building floor and the raised floor being spaced above the slab of the building.
  • the inventive workstation is constructed to take advantage of the known principle of “displacement ventilation”.
  • the air conditioning is called the mixing type where cold and hot or warm are mixed by blowing the conditioned air into a workstation or an open office area.
  • a typical displacement ventilation system for cooling supplies conditioned air from a low side wall diffuser of very low velocity to limit entrapment of impurities.
  • the conditioned air is supplied from a plenum below the floor which will be explained below.
  • the supply temperature is slightly lower than the desired room air temperature, and the supply air velocity is very low. From the floor plenum below the conditioned air is directly introduced to the occupied zone, where the occupants stay.
  • Exhausts are located at or close to the ceiling through which the warm room air is exhausted from the room. Because it is cooler than the room air, the supply air spreads near the floor and then is heated by the heat sources in the occupied zone.
  • These heat sources e.g., persons and computers
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the installation of a displacement ventilation Stand-alone unit with air emanating from an angle;
  • FIG. 2 is a perspective view of FIG. 1 where the air emanating from a straight front outlet as opposed to the flow shown in FIG. 1 ;
  • FIG. 3 is a unitary duct system of a displacement ventilation installation of a stand-alone unit.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a stand-alone unit which consists of a hollow chamber 1 .
  • the stand-alone unit can be placed next to a desk or table representing a work station or any other station involving one or more persons.
  • the unit 1 consists of a hollow chamber 1 which is situated on a floor 3 having a plenum of air conditioned air there below. The conditioned air is fed into the hollow unit 1 by a flexible duct 2 deriving the air from below the floor 3 .
  • the unit 1 has a top 4 having a control knob 5 thereon that controls the amount of air passing through the unit 1 , as will be explained below.
  • the arrows A indicate the direction of the movement of the air through the adjustable louvers 6 .
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the same layout as is shown in FIG. 1 except that the front of the stand-alone unit 1 is straight, meaning, at a right angle to the basic unit 1 . In this way the stream of the conditioned air is exiting straight from the front of the stand-alone unit 1 and into the ambient air of the room where the stand-alone unit 1 is located.
  • FIG. 3 is a perspective view of the stand-alone unit 1 shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 with parts broken away to show the interior of the unit 1 .
  • the stand-alone unit 1 has a lateral outlet that will discharge the conditioned air into the general environment of the room where any of the air conditioned units 21 are located. However, in the immediate vicinity of the unit there are front outlets 6 that may be directing air at an angle or in a direct and straight mode as was explained with regard to FIGS. 1 and 2 .
  • the unit is located on a floor 3 that has an air conditioned plenum there below.
  • the duct 2 feeds air into the stand-alone unit 1 or chamber 1 by way of the flexible duct 2 which is located below the floor 3 .
  • the stand-alone unit 1 has a lateral outlet 30 which is controlled by louvers 31 as is indicated by the arrow 31 .
  • the top of the stand-alone unit 1 workstation is shown at 4 .
  • the installation takes place on an air conditioned plenum floor 3 that is created above a concrete slab 1 having a raised floor 2 to thereby create an air plenum that is charged with conditioned air.
  • the raised floor may be constructed of tiles 3 which has the advantage of placing any workstation in a predetermined location in an open office arrangement. It is merely a matter of removing a certain tile and replacing it with a tile that has an upward air opening therein.
  • the air opening is used to direct air to a workstation located above such opening.
  • the inventive concept uses an under floor supply of air which moves the conditioned air through a flexible duct to a rigid duct through the floor 3 and then upwardly into the stand-alone unit 1 .
  • the stand-alone unit 1 has several air controls therein.
  • the damper control consists of plates of metal 36 and 38 that can move relative to each other.
  • the plate 36 has openings 37 therein and the plate 38 has openings 39 therein. Once the plates 36 and 38 are moved relative to each other, the openings 37 and 39 will more or less overlap each other to thereby control the amount of passing through these openings 37 and 39 .
  • the volume control 34 consists of a rotatable sheet of metal such as a vane 34 that is controlled by the knob 5 located on top of the unit 1 .
  • the rotational direction of the vane 34 is indicated by the arrow C.
  • the front outlet of the stand-alone unit has several louvers 33 therein that will control the flow of air either up or down including left and right.
  • FIG. 3 also illustrates the placement of an ultraviolet UV light source at 40 which is placed within the air flow passing through the stand-alone unit. The intention for the light source 40 is to purify the air to improve the air quality passing through the unit and into the general ambient atmosphere of the work place,
  • the present system is incorporated in a stand-alone unit that may be placed anywhere in an open office space wherein the conditioned air is supplied through a plenum under the floor of the office layout.
  • the stand-alone unit may be placed next to desk or a table or anywhere were several persons my be working in unison on a certain project.
  • the stand-alone unit or units may easily be placed in a different location to accommodate the new layout.
  • the person or persons sitting or standing at the front of the workstation can control the emanating air from the stand-alone unit as to velocity, direction and amount. Any excess air that is generated by the movement of the volume damper 34 will be expelled through the louvers 30 . This is the result of the novel air displacement ventilation system that is disclosed in the prior application as well as the present one.

Abstract

A personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system is located above a floor having an air plenum below the floor but above the concrete slab. A displacement ventilation stand-alone air chamber is located above the floor and thereby delivers air above the air plenum. The air chamber has a frontal outlet and a lateral air outlet into the ambient atmosphere. Within the stand-alone chamber the air is being displaced in various amounts to various outlets. The stand-alone unit can be placed wherever it is needed or desired in many locations in a wide open work place as a retrofit.

Description

    PRIOR APPLICATIONS
  • This application is a Continuation-In-Part of application Ser. No. 11/069,453 having a filing date of Mar. 2, 2005.
  • FIELD OF THE INVENTION
  • The invention at hand relates to either heating or cooling the air in a large building, especially with a floor area having multiple persons working therein. The invention is directed primarily to the personal comfort of a person working at a workstation including a desk by directing conditioned air to the immediate vicinity of the person or persons present at those workstations and by giving those persons control over the flow and direction of the conditioned air, and to providing displacement ventilation to the surrounding area.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • In the field of heating and cooling, generally known as “air conditioning”, there are known problems causing discomfort to the occupants in the building or a room. Inefficiencies in the system result in excessive operating costs in the operation of the building and problems in the operation and control of the present systems. Also present systems tend to have poor indoor air quality (IAQ).
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ART
  • U.S. Pat. No. 374,424 discloses a system for supplying fresh air to the environment of an auditorium and wherein the air blows directly to the chair which is occupied by a person without any mechanical intervention or modification.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 1,194,527 shows the ventilation of a class room wherein the outside air under pressure enters the class room through a ventilated floor panel and is further distributed into a desk where the pupil is sitting. The pupil may have some control over the amount of air flowing to or through the desk. In both of the above cited patents, the air is not conditioned or modified as to heat or cold.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,140,829 describes an air conditioning system wherein there is a cooling of high ceiling rooms by providing a stratum of cooled and dehumidified air in the lower levels of the room up to the height of the occupants without considering the relatively large cost and the complications of treating all the air in the room.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,341,125 illustrates a way of ventilating a desk at a workstation by simply mounting a fan within the rear of the desk and by blowing air at the person and by giving the person working at the desk somewhat of a control of the fan by positioning the same or by controlling the speed of the air flow.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,507,643 teaches the ventilation of restaurant equipment by supplying air to and from restaurant table and their equipment. The person or persons seated at the equipment have no control over the flow and/or the direction of the flow of the air.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,672,120 shows a ventilated table having a fan mounted in a horizontal position which is emitting air in a horizontal direction and the air flows out of the lateral sides of the table.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,616,617 illustrates a ventilated table similarly constructed as the table shown in the immediately cited patent above.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,734,990 discloses a desk as a workstation having a combination fan and heater mounted therein. The fan blows the conditioned air (heat) directly at the person sitting at the desk. The direction of the air is adjustable by tilting the fan in one direction or the other and the level of the heat is adjustable by way of a rheostat.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,835,186 discloses an air conditioning system wherein there are upstanding air emitting columns receiving air through ducts in the floor of the system. It is considered to be a local or spot air conditioning system.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,877,990 discloses a novel building structure embodying a multi-cellular load supporting floor having an air distributing and an electrical wiring system therein wherein both the heated and cooled air and the electrical wiring are distributed through selected ones of the cells in the floor.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 3,322,056 teaches the elimination of duct work in a building by adding fan driven diffusers in the ceiling whereby the air in the chamber in the ceiling may be used as an unpressurized distribution chamber.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 3,516,347 shows the use of a double plenum air conditioning system which creates a space between a structural and the floor of the roof above the building and the double plenum is divided by a horizontal partition into an upper part and a lower plenum and a supply of air is fed to one of the plenums and return air is withdrawn form the other of the plenums. The supply of air can be hot, cold or neutral. Inlets and outlets connect the plenums through the slab to the room below or through the floor to the room above.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 4,035,018 discloses a system whereby conditioned air is distributed through a floor plenum to a multiple of chairs having exhausts connected to each of the chairs to expel the conditioned air into the general environment of the room. The occupants of the chairs have no control over the speed and the direction of the air flowing to the chairs.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 4,135,440 illustrates an air conditioning system, both ceiling and floor plenums and each of the plenums has individual air outlets diffusing into the room between the plenums. In addition, there are individual elongated air outlets tubes suspended from the ceiling plenum or upstanding from the floor plenum. Each of the outlet tubes can be directed against a person sitting at a workstation. The respective person has control over the direction of the air emanating from the outlets.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 4,378,727 shows an open space office system including a plurality of freestanding workstations which are constructed of vertical panels and are removably mounted to an upper board member to direct cooling air to a user of the organization permitting its use in a convenient manner in various environments.
  • Another known prior art air conditioned workstation is known under the word “CLIMADESK”. It is described as a plenum which is installed under the top of the desk. The air plenum has an inlet to receive conditioned air from an air conditioning unit being placed apart but adjacent to the desk. The air conditioning unit receives fresh air from the outside of the building through an air intake vent. The air plenum installed under the top surface of the desk directs conditioned air toward a person sitting at the desk. The conditioned air is exiting toward the person by way of two front louvers and is further directed upwardly from the top surface of the desk in front of the person sitting at the desk. The temperature of the conditioned air can be controlled by way of a thermostat located on a front panel of the desk. This kind of an arrangement greatly reduces the mobility of such a workstation and thereby eliminates an effective arrangement of all of the workstations in an open office concept.
  • German published specification (Offenlegungsschrift) No. 24 07 448 discloses a workstation in the form of a desk receiving conditioned air by way of a flexible hose through the floor having air ducts therein. The occupant at the desk has no control over the flow of the air with regard to direction and/or speed.
  • German published specification (Offenlegungsschrift) No. 27 19 670 discloses a similar system as was disclosed in the German publication above. In this arrangement, conditioned air is supplied by way of ducts located below the floor of the open office area. From there the conditioned air is funneled to upstanding tubes located at each of the workstations. The conditioned air is blown into the room at a location above the desk surface at each of the workstations. The occupant at the desk has some control over the direction and the speed of the air flowing through the outlets of the upstanding tubes.
  • German published application (Offenlegungsschrift) No. 29 38 702 is similar to both German publications discussed above and does not add any more knowledge to the already known prior art.
  • Japanese Patent No. 61-11535 discloses an air conditioning system having a floor plenum installed over a floor slab of a building. The conditioned air is driven by a fan into a hollow partition situated over an opening in the floor. Conditioned air may exit into the room at a higher elevation than the height of the desk. At the bottom of the floor, whereupon the desk is placed, there is a further air outlet which is directing conditioned air to the feet of a person sitting at the desk. It appears that the person has very little control over the volume, speed and direction of the conditioned air entering the vicinity of the desk.
  • BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • An object of the invention is to present a system for distributing conditioned air throughout an office layout in a most efficient way. In a building whether large or small, for example, the control of temperature, air flow, humidity and the like, or even individual rooms and workstations leaves many persons in the building or within a room or in the vicinity of a workstation uncomfortable or dissatisfied with the condition of their particular environment. Different people have different levels of metabolism and therefore different comfort needs.
  • Also, different locations in a building or on a floor, or even a single room or closer yet in the vicinity of a workstation, are not satisfactorily heated or cooled, that is, air conditioned, and give rise to complaints about discomfort and illness, resulting in absenteeism, sickness and, of course, loss of productivity.
  • Further, conventional air conditioning systems generally require expensive duct work and installations, usually in floors or ceilings or both, which cause unnecessary heating or cooling of unused space, particularly the spaces that surround the duct work and the spaces above the head level of the occupants. For example, the approximately upper four feet of space in a room having a twelve foot ceiling is an unoccupied space and the air in that space does not need to be controlled. The above mentioned duct work also imposes a substantial energy demand for the movement of air through the ducts and additionally presents difficulties in cleaning the ducts.
  • Prior art and known systems with fixed floor and/or wall mounted air outlet grilles limited the location of workstations, furniture and or equipment to positions at locations which would enhance the flow of air. Such prior art systems also created complaints of discomfort caused by high or low air velocities or high or low temperatures depending upon the location of the air outlet grilles. Also, air conditioning outlet grilles and the ducts associated therewith frequently need to be moved to accommodate changes in air conditioning loads or a rearrangement of the work space or the individual workstations in an open office layout, for example.
  • In today's world of large office buildings, not only in height but also in the expanse of the floors, it has become a design objective to provide individual workstations and individual work spaces in generally wide open rooms. That is, instead of providing each occupant with his or her permanent, generally enclosed room or office, a number of workstations or cubicles are provided with each having partitions or room dividers which partially enclose the space to create a separate work space. The partitions or dividers do not extend to the ceiling of the room. Often the workstations include two, three or more partitions for the purpose of providing the worker with a feeling of privacy.
  • While such workstations may be economically beneficial with regard to the amount of floor space being used, the use of partitions creates an impediment to the flow of the conditioned air throughout the room. That is, conditioned air flows freely in the area above and around the workstations. However, within the workstations or between the room dividers or partitions there is no means for providing the workstation occupant with an acceptable flow of conditioned air. Therefore, the workers often become uncomfortable, or even ill, which in turn decreases productivity and/or causes absenteeism.
  • Consequently, in the field of heating and cooling there exists a need for providing a flow of conditioned air directly to or near a person sitting at a workstation, without blowing at the person and without creating a draft, as well as to occupants of the surrounding area. More particularly, there exists a need for a workstation to be so equipped wherein the occupant can individually control and obtain the amount of conditioned air supplied within the workstation while maintaining a desirable flow of conditioned air to surrounding areas. The amount of conditioned air within the workstation is controlled by the person to maximize the comfort level, well being health and level of productivity of each worker, while maintaining a desirable flow of conditioned air to surrounding areas.
  • Conventional room dividers for workstations may supply conditioned air to workstations, which conditioned air flows through an air flow grille at about the height where the worker is seated but the worker has very little control over the flow of the air or its direction. Such room dividers consist of a hollow space being created by panels that are spaced from each other by a predetermined distance to define an air flow there between. The hollow room divider is placed on an opening in the floor which floor is spaced above the slab of the building which constitutes the building floor to thereby form a large or major air plenum. This air plenum, therefore, is formed by the slab of the building floor and the raised floor being spaced above the slab of the building. The air plenum is charged with conditioned air (hot or cold) at or near room pressure to be explained below. Applicants' prior art U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,646,966; 4,860,642; 5,135,436; 6,238,462 and 6,318,113 are directed to conditioned air being supplied through a floor plenum and from there distributed to individual workstations through various forms of air delivery. This system differs from others by pressurizing the air which causes excessive leakage and loss of energy. All of the noted patents operate in various satisfactory manners, but there is still room for improvement. In all the known prior art patents as well as applicants' own patents there is a tendency of the air that is introduced into the workstation and into various open spaces to create air streams or air whirls that have a detrimental effect on the overall climate within the room where persons are working. This circulating air does not contribute to the cleanliness of the ambient air. On the contrary, the circulating air will pick up various contaminants present in the ambient atmosphere until exhausted.
  • The inventive workstation is constructed to take advantage of the known principle of “displacement ventilation”. In all known systems mentioned above the air conditioning is called the mixing type where cold and hot or warm are mixed by blowing the conditioned air into a workstation or an open office area. A typical displacement ventilation system for cooling supplies conditioned air from a low side wall diffuser of very low velocity to limit entrapment of impurities. In the inventive concept, the conditioned air is supplied from a plenum below the floor which will be explained below. The supply temperature is slightly lower than the desired room air temperature, and the supply air velocity is very low. From the floor plenum below the conditioned air is directly introduced to the occupied zone, where the occupants stay. Exhausts are located at or close to the ceiling through which the warm room air is exhausted from the room. Because it is cooler than the room air, the supply air spreads near the floor and then is heated by the heat sources in the occupied zone. These heat sources (e.g., persons and computers) create upward convective flows in the form of thermal plumes. The plumes remove heat and contaminants that are less dense than air from the surrounding occupied zones.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the installation of a displacement ventilation Stand-alone unit with air emanating from an angle;
  • FIG. 2 is a perspective view of FIG. 1 where the air emanating from a straight front outlet as opposed to the flow shown in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is a unitary duct system of a displacement ventilation installation of a stand-alone unit.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a stand-alone unit which consists of a hollow chamber 1. The stand-alone unit can be placed next to a desk or table representing a work station or any other station involving one or more persons. The unit 1 consists of a hollow chamber 1 which is situated on a floor 3 having a plenum of air conditioned air there below. The conditioned air is fed into the hollow unit 1 by a flexible duct 2 deriving the air from below the floor 3. The unit 1 has a top 4 having a control knob 5 thereon that controls the amount of air passing through the unit 1, as will be explained below. The unit 1 shown in FIG. 1 has a front air outlet that is angled to the right so the air emanating from the front will be directed to the right, possibly to a person sitting or working at that particular work station. The arrows A indicate the direction of the movement of the air through the adjustable louvers 6.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the same layout as is shown in FIG. 1 except that the front of the stand-alone unit 1 is straight, meaning, at a right angle to the basic unit 1. In this way the stream of the conditioned air is exiting straight from the front of the stand-alone unit 1 and into the ambient air of the room where the stand-alone unit 1 is located.
  • FIG. 3 is a perspective view of the stand-alone unit 1 shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 with parts broken away to show the interior of the unit 1. Some of the same reference characters have been applied as were in FIGS. 1 and 2. The stand-alone unit 1 has a lateral outlet that will discharge the conditioned air into the general environment of the room where any of the air conditioned units 21 are located. However, in the immediate vicinity of the unit there are front outlets 6 that may be directing air at an angle or in a direct and straight mode as was explained with regard to FIGS. 1 and 2. According to FIG. 3, the unit is located on a floor 3 that has an air conditioned plenum there below. The duct 2 feeds air into the stand-alone unit 1 or chamber 1 by way of the flexible duct 2 which is located below the floor 3. The stand-alone unit 1 has a lateral outlet 30 which is controlled by louvers 31 as is indicated by the arrow 31. The top of the stand-alone unit 1 workstation is shown at 4. The installation takes place on an air conditioned plenum floor 3 that is created above a concrete slab 1 having a raised floor 2 to thereby create an air plenum that is charged with conditioned air. The raised floor may be constructed of tiles 3 which has the advantage of placing any workstation in a predetermined location in an open office arrangement. It is merely a matter of removing a certain tile and replacing it with a tile that has an upward air opening therein. The air opening is used to direct air to a workstation located above such opening. The inventive concept uses an under floor supply of air which moves the conditioned air through a flexible duct to a rigid duct through the floor 3 and then upwardly into the stand-alone unit 1. The stand-alone unit 1 has several air controls therein. There is damper control 35 within the unit 1 that controls the air flowing into the front of the unit 1. The damper control consists of plates of metal 36 and 38 that can move relative to each other. The plate 36 has openings 37 therein and the plate 38 has openings 39 therein. Once the plates 36 and 38 are moved relative to each other, the openings 37 and 39 will more or less overlap each other to thereby control the amount of passing through these openings 37 and 39. The volume control 34 consists of a rotatable sheet of metal such as a vane 34 that is controlled by the knob 5 located on top of the unit 1. The rotational direction of the vane 34 is indicated by the arrow C. The front outlet of the stand-alone unit has several louvers 33 therein that will control the flow of air either up or down including left and right. FIG. 3 also illustrates the placement of an ultraviolet UV light source at 40 which is placed within the air flow passing through the stand-alone unit. The intention for the light source 40 is to purify the air to improve the air quality passing through the unit and into the general ambient atmosphere of the work place,
  • Operation
  • Contrary to the inventive disclosure in the above identified application, wherein the inventive displacement system is incorporated in office furniture or the like, the present system is incorporated in a stand-alone unit that may be placed anywhere in an open office space wherein the conditioned air is supplied through a plenum under the floor of the office layout. This way, the stand-alone unit may be placed next to desk or a table or anywhere were several persons my be working in unison on a certain project. On the other hand, if the office layout or architecture is changed at any time, the stand-alone unit or units may easily be placed in a different location to accommodate the new layout. The person or persons sitting or standing at the front of the workstation can control the emanating air from the stand-alone unit as to velocity, direction and amount. Any excess air that is generated by the movement of the volume damper 34 will be expelled through the louvers 30. This is the result of the novel air displacement ventilation system that is disclosed in the prior application as well as the present one.

Claims (11)

1. A personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system incorporated in a stand-alone unit, said system is installed on a floor having an air plenum below said floor but above a concrete slab, a supply of conditioned air is located in said plenum and is moving air into a flexible air duct, said stand-alone unit consists of an upstanding chamber being connected to said flexible air duct, said chamber having various controls therein to control a flow of air either to a front of said chamber or to a lateral side of said chamber into the ambient atmosphere surrounding said chamber.
2. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 1, wherein one of said various controls is an air balance control mechanism.
3. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 2, wherein said balance control mechanism consists of two adjacent metal plates each having openings therein, whereby, when one of the plates is moved relative to the other, said openings more or less open or close an air flow passing through said plates.
4. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 1, wherein another of said various control mechanisms is a damper to adjust air volume within said chamber.
5. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 4, wherein said volume damper consists of an upstanding blade which may control or inhibit a flow of air from said one balance control mechanism to a front of said chamber.
6. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 5, wherein said upstanding plate is rotatable around a vertical axis.
7. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 1, wherein said front of said chamber includes louvers to direct air emanating from said louvers into different directions.
8. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 1, wherein said front of said chamber is located at a right angle relative to a plane of the basic chamber.
9. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 1, wherein said front of said chamber is located at an angle relative to a plane of said basic chamber.
10. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 1, wherein said system is adapted to be placed in the vicinity of any existing furniture to obtain a combined personal air conditioning and displacement ventilation.
11. The personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system of claim 1 including an ultraviolet UV light source placed within said stand-alone unit and within said supply and flow of conditioned air, said light source purifying the air passing through said system.
US11/415,638 2005-03-02 2006-05-02 Personalized air conditioning/ displacement ventilation system Abandoned US20060211362A1 (en)

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US11/415,638 US20060211362A1 (en) 2005-03-02 2006-05-02 Personalized air conditioning/ displacement ventilation system
CA 2556725 CA2556725A1 (en) 2006-05-02 2006-08-22 Personalized air conditioning/displacement ventilation system
US12/221,398 US20090124188A1 (en) 2005-03-02 2008-08-04 Personal distribution terminal

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US20130337737A1 (en) * 2012-06-14 2013-12-19 International Business Machines Corporation Compressed gas cylinder cabinet with regulated exhaust control
PT106433A (en) * 2012-07-09 2014-01-09 Univ Do Algarve TOWER EQUIPPED WITH PERSONALIZED VENTILATION
KR101488003B1 (en) 2013-07-26 2015-01-29 삼성중공업 주식회사 Converter cooling system
USD852941S1 (en) * 2017-03-22 2019-07-02 Wirth Research Limited Air flow deflector
US20210080141A1 (en) * 2017-07-14 2021-03-18 Daikin Industries, Ltd. Air conditioner, air-conditioning system, communication system, control system, device control system, device management system, and sound information analysis system
US11215006B1 (en) * 2020-02-14 2022-01-04 Jerry G. Crittenden Exterior ventilator door and ventilator assembly for bringing fresh air into a structure
US11243008B2 (en) * 2018-08-21 2022-02-08 Air Distribution Technologies Ip, Llc Ductwork frame assembly
IT202100010184A1 (en) * 2021-04-21 2022-10-21 Ste Srl AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEMS FOR ROOMS

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US11243008B2 (en) * 2018-08-21 2022-02-08 Air Distribution Technologies Ip, Llc Ductwork frame assembly
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