US3111077A - Convertible fumehood - Google Patents

Convertible fumehood Download PDF

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US3111077A
US3111077A US180608A US18060862A US3111077A US 3111077 A US3111077 A US 3111077A US 180608 A US180608 A US 180608A US 18060862 A US18060862 A US 18060862A US 3111077 A US3111077 A US 3111077A
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opening
chamber
air
auxiliary chamber
working chamber
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Cortright Peggy
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B08CLEANING
    • B08BCLEANING IN GENERAL; PREVENTION OF FOULING IN GENERAL
    • B08B15/00Preventing escape of dirt or fumes from the area where they are produced; Collecting or removing dirt or fumes from that area
    • B08B15/02Preventing escape of dirt or fumes from the area where they are produced; Collecting or removing dirt or fumes from that area using chambers or hoods covering the area
    • B08B15/023Fume cabinets or cupboards, e.g. for laboratories
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B08CLEANING
    • B08BCLEANING IN GENERAL; PREVENTION OF FOULING IN GENERAL
    • B08B2215/00Preventing escape of dirt or fumes from the area where they are produced; Collecting or removing dirt or fumes from that area
    • B08B2215/003Preventing escape of dirt or fumes from the area where they are produced; Collecting or removing dirt or fumes from that area with the assistance of blowing nozzles

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  • fumelioods comprised a working chamber having an open front and means usually at the top of the chamber to exhaust air and undesirable gasses or other substances from the chamber. This would permit a per son or technician to conduct experiments and other processes within the chamber, and be free from the danger of inhaling the undesirable gasses because the force of the exhaust would [remove air from the room in which the fumehood was located through the working chamber, thence through the exhaust duct, carrying the undesirable gasses and not permitting them to enter the room. It was then desirable to provide a transparent protective shield through which the technician could observe the reactions taking place within the fumehood.
  • a transparent shield is in the form of a strong glass such as a safety glass or wired glass, and is placed within a sash so that the shield may be moved up or down to provide access to the working chamber.
  • the sash which would be just large enough to cover the front opening, as well as the grille, could then be moved up and down to completely cover the grille or completely cover the opening, or in any intermediate position partially to cover the grille and the front opening simultaneously. In this way, that portion of the front opening which would be reduced by the sash would be compensated for by a corresponding portion of the grille which would be uncovered as the sash was lowered.
  • these hoods supply air through an intake duct or port. The air is then removed through the exhaust port.
  • the glass sash may be substantially closed without atfecting the velocity of the exhaust system.
  • Such hoods work well with the sash closed.
  • an object of this invention to provide an air conditioning furnehood in which an auxiliary air supply is introduced through an intake construction which directs the flow of such air in front of the open face of the working chamber when it is not covered by the sash so as to substantially minimize flow of air and other substances through the open face of the working chamber during the operation of the hood.
  • FIG. 1 is a front elevation illustrating alternate replaceable parts at its upper portion such as a solid closure means shown partially broken off and grill-e means shown partially broken off with other parts of the figure shown broken away;
  • FIG. 2 is a medial cross section with the solid closure means in place, showing the solid closure means in extended position in phantom, and also showing air currents by means of arrows when the sash is in up position;
  • FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic view similar to the sectional view shown in FIG. 2 showing air currents, by means of arrows, which flow when sash is in down position;
  • FIG. 4 is a diagrammatic view similar to FIG. 3, showing flow of air, by means of arrows, when the solid closure means is removed and the grille means is installed in place thereof and the intake collar is sealed;
  • FIG. 5 is another diagrammatic view similar to FIG. 4, showing the flow of air, by means of arrows, when the grille means is installed, the intake collar is sealed, and the sash is in down position;
  • FIG. 6 is a detail of the top of the adjustable bafile showing the baflle and the top wall in section.
  • My fumehood may be constructed of any material strong enough for the purpose. It is also desirable for the construction material to be fireproof and for the floor or counter of the device to be acid resistant. I, therefore, provide that the main frame Ill be made of enameled steel coated with acid resistant paint.
  • the floor or counter 11, should be of a material such as stone, and suflicie-ntly thick to withstand acids, heat and dam-aging reactions.
  • the floor 11 may be a separate counter-top over which the main frame 10 of the hood is placed, or it may be an integral part of the hood construction.
  • the main frame 10 has a rear wall d2, a top wall 13 and side walls 14 and 15.
  • the fnont or face wall 16 is formed with a front or face opening 17 at the lower portion thereof and an upper opening 1 8 at the upper portion thereof adapted to contain or be closed by either a grille 19 or solid closure means 20.
  • the areas of the face opening 17 and upper opening 18 should be substantially the same.
  • I provide a defiector 17a. This is desirable to permit entry of air at the bottom of the working space 31 when the sash is closed.
  • the bottom of sash 31 will be closed against the top of deflector 17a which still permits an air passage 171; through the bottom of the front of the device.
  • passageway 17b will prevent leakage of noxious material because it provides a passage for air to enter the device and leave through the exhaust duct.
  • the front Wall 17 has a forwardly and downwardly depending oifset portion 22 which is located between upper opening 18 and the face opening 17. This offset portion contains a series of perforated openings 23 through which air may move. Directly behind the oifset portion 22, there is an angled baffle means 25 which is set between walls 14 and 15 of the main frame iii. Sash guides or channels 26 and 27 are associated with walls 14 and 15 respectively to provide means for raising and lowering slideable panel means such as a glazed sash between the upper opening 13, the lower face opening 17, and the working chamber 28 of the device.
  • the sash 30 is provided with a pane of safety glass 31, or wired glass, and is adapted to slide up and down within the sash guides 26 and 27.
  • the height of the sash should be suflicient to cover the lower face opening 17 when completely lowered.
  • the sash 30 may be maintained at various positions by balancing means such as a counterweight or sash balance cooperating with cable 3 6 attached to the upper end of sash 30.
  • Exhaust collar 37 communicates with working chamber 31, and may be attached to any suitable type of duct or other means which may be connected to an exhaust blower or other means of moving the air out of the Working chamber 28.
  • I provide an inner wall '40 which depends from top wall 13 to a point above the top of the sash 30 when the sash 30 is in lowermost position.
  • This forms an auxiliary chamber 41 defined by either the grille 19 or the solid plate 20', the inner wall 40, the forward upper wall 13a, the side walls 14 and 15, and the bafiie 25.
  • I provide an intake collar 39 through forward upper wall 13a.
  • the described construction also leaves an opening below inner wall and above angled baffie 25 designated by reference numeral 42.
  • I also provide an internal angled baffie 43 disposed between upper bafiie holders 44 and lower baifie cleats 45. Baflie holders 44 and cleats 45 are attached to the main frame 10.
  • bafile 43 is pivotally suspended on the studs 46a, and positioned in selected pivoting positions by means of choice of a slot 52 and the cooperating action of the hanger or holding means such as the bafile holders 44.
  • Baflie holders 44 comprise a stainless steel angled bolt 47 inserted through an appropriate hole 48 and maintained in depending position by means of a nut 49'. Lower part of angled bolt 47 is adapted to receive a wing nut 51). There is a lock nut on the angled bolt 47 to help hold it in place.
  • the wing nut 51? may be substituted with an acid-resistant knurled knob with a threaded insert to fit over the end of angled bolt 47. Baflle 43 is thus held in place by means of the described assembly forming the holder 44. It is desirable to have an acid resistant washer 5 1 between the knurled knob and the baffle 43.
  • the b-afiie 43 may be placed in a variety of adjustably selected positions.
  • baffle 55 may be constructed of safety glass or wired glass and illumination, such as electric lamps in proper lamp sockets 55, may be placed above baffle 55 if it is desired to provide illumination. Otherwise baffle 55 may be made of asbestos board or any other corrosive resistant material, the same as bafile 43, or it may be made of steel or any other suit-able material.
  • the Device as an Air Conditioning Hood
  • a suitable duct is attached to intake collar 39 and connected to an input blower to provide an auxiliary air input for the device.
  • Solid plate 20 is attached to the device to cover upper opening 18.
  • the input blower and the exhaust blower are then turned on to provide a fiow of air as defined by the arrows in FIG. 3 of the drawings, when sash 30 is placed in down position.
  • chamber 41 is now formed as a plenum chamber, and the auxiliary air leaves chamber 41 at opening 42 to enter the working chamber 28.
  • perforated openings 23 will remain open, the action of the input blower and the exhaust blower are such that the air will nevertheless principally flow through chamber 41 and out of opening 42 to exhaust working chamber 28.
  • Some air will flow upwardly through perforations 23 through chamber 41 and out of opening 42, and some air will flow underneath deflector 1 7a and through air passage 17b.
  • a suflicient amount of air is provided by the auxiliary air supply through chamber 41 to cover the entire face of the opening 17 on the outside of the device so that the exhaust blower will suck in mainly this auxiliary air in clearing out the working area 28, and thus, substantially all of the conditioned air is kept in the room, and is not dissipated through the fumehood. This will be the case even though the sash is completely up, and the entire opening 17 is open.
  • This construction also provides that none of the noxio-us material in the working chamber 28 may leave through any part of opening 17.
  • the operation of the intake blower and the exhaust blower are designed to provide an average air velocity at the face opening 17 of approximately feet per minute. This, of course, can be varied by changing the speed of the blowers as well as the various openings and baffle arrangements.
  • the Device as a Constant Volume Fumehood If it is desired to use the device in an installation where there is no air conditioning problem, it is possible to eliminate the auxiliary air supply which is brought inthrough intake collar 3?.
  • intake collar 39 is sealed up by means of a valve (not shown) or by means-of a threaded cap 5-5 which may be screwed onto the intake collar 39 upon removal of the duct means or by any other sealing means.
  • a convertible fumehood having a main frame comprising a working chamber defined by at least one wall, and means at the front thereof to provide at least one face opening in the lower part of said front; an auxiliary chamber located above said face opening having a rear portion adjacent to the upper part of said front of the working chamber with at least one interchamber opening between the said working chamber and the said auxiliary chamber above the said face opening, and at least one outside opening in the said auxiliary chamber for communication from the said auxiliary chamber to outside the device; closure means comprising slideable panel means being suificiently large to cover said lower face opening and adapted to be moved on guide means on the main frame to selected positions relative to said face opening and said interchamber opening so that when said closure means is moved from said face opening to said interchamber opening, said face opening will be progressively uncovered and said interchamber opening will be progressively covered; said outside opening of said auxiliary chamber adapted to be selectively and alternatively fitted with a solid closure, or a closure with open communication means for gasses; said working chamber having exhaust means for exhausting gasses
  • a convertible fumehood comprising: a main frame comprising a working chamber having exhaust means to remove gasses or airborne material from the said working chamber; at least one first opening and at least one second opening in tne said working chamber being adjacent each other and substantially aligned in planar relationship on a first plane; a closure means excessively large to cover either of the said openings and adapted to be moved reciprocally on guide means to selected positions within the said main frame along a second plane relatively near and substantially parallel to the said first mentioned plane, ranging from a first selected position covering the first of said openings, then to a plurality of selected positions covering portions of the said first and second openings, then to a last selected position covering the second mentioned opening; said second mentioned opening communicating with a second chamber having communication means adapted to be selectively connected alternately to input blower means and to positive closure means and said second chamber having other means communicating with the atmosphere and adapted to be selectively alternately connected to positive closure means and to closure means having at least one opening for the passage of gasses; and said second chamber having at least one

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Description

Nov. 19,1963 P. CORTRIGHT 3,111,077
CONVERTIBLE FUMEHOOD Fil ed March 19, 1962 INVENTOR.
P566) COR TR/GHT Z (kw k awry,
United States Patent 3,111,077 CGNVERTIBLE FUMEHQQD Peggy Qortright, 103 Bucket Lane, Levittown, NY. Filed Mar. 19, 1962, Ser. No. 180,608 6 Claims. (Cl. 98-l15l This invention relates to fumehoods, and particularly to fumehoods having interchangeable means to convert the said fumehoods from constant volume fumehoods which remove air from a room in which they are installed to air conditioning fumehoods in which the quantity of air removed from the room is controlled, and vice versa. Prior to my invention, various types of fumehoods were well known and used for the purpose of drawing off on desirable gasses, fumes or other substances which might poison or pollute the air, for the purpose of providing breatheable air around the working area or working chamber associated with the fumehood.
Originally, fumelioods comprised a working chamber having an open front and means usually at the top of the chamber to exhaust air and undesirable gasses or other substances from the chamber. This would permit a per son or technician to conduct experiments and other processes within the chamber, and be free from the danger of inhaling the undesirable gasses because the force of the exhaust would [remove air from the room in which the fumehood was located through the working chamber, thence through the exhaust duct, carrying the undesirable gasses and not permitting them to enter the room. It was then desirable to provide a transparent protective shield through which the technician could observe the reactions taking place within the fumehood. Such a transparent shield is in the form of a strong glass such as a safety glass or wired glass, and is placed within a sash so that the shield may be moved up or down to provide access to the working chamber.
In conventional fumehoods, closing the shield would reduce the intake area at the face of the working chamber until the intake area would be completely closed and block further flow of air. Thus, provision was made, by means of a grille or other opening, to provide for flow of air and continued operation of the device even though the glass sash was completely closed. In order to overcome the correlated problem of changing the rate of flow ,of air by enlarging and reducing the size of the front opening of the chamber by raising and lowering the sash, an open grille of substantially the same size as the front opening of the chamber was placed above the front opening and communicating with the working chamber. The sash, which would be just large enough to cover the front opening, as well as the grille, could then be moved up and down to completely cover the grille or completely cover the opening, or in any intermediate position partially to cover the grille and the front opening simultaneously. In this way, that portion of the front opening which would be reduced by the sash would be compensated for by a corresponding portion of the grille which would be uncovered as the sash was lowered.
Thus, air would be removed from the room at a constant rate of flow, whether the sash was up or down. This prevents high air velocities at the lower level of the working chamber which are undesirable. Thus, the constant volume fumehood which may be operated without creating undesirable velocities, even with the sash substantially closed, solves this problem.
However, with the advent of air conditioning, need for a type of hood was dictated which could be operated without drawing large quantities of air from the room in which it was installed, the ideal hood, of course, being one which could supply its own air and would draw no air out of the room in which it was installed. Hoods have been developed which minimize the withdrawal of room air and are called air conditioning fumehoods.
In principle, these hoods supply air through an intake duct or port. The air is then removed through the exhaust port. In such hoods, there is no grille, and the glass sash may be substantially closed without atfecting the velocity of the exhaust system. Such hoods work well with the sash closed. However, when the sash is opened, there is sometimes undesirable leakage of noxious fumes from the working chamber into the room, especially from the lower part of the working chamber.
It is, therefore, an object of this invention to provide an air conditioning furnehood in which an auxiliary air supply is introduced through an intake construction which directs the flow of such air in front of the open face of the working chamber when it is not covered by the sash so as to substantially minimize flow of air and other substances through the open face of the working chamber during the operation of the hood.
it is a further object of this invention to provide a fume'hood construction which may be converted from a constant volume hood to an air conditioning hood by a simple and easy interchange of parts.
Further objects and advantages will appear in the specification hereinbelow. These objects and advantages are achieved by the construction illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a front elevation illustrating alternate replaceable parts at its upper portion such as a solid closure means shown partially broken off and grill-e means shown partially broken off with other parts of the figure shown broken away;
FIG. 2 is a medial cross section with the solid closure means in place, showing the solid closure means in extended position in phantom, and also showing air currents by means of arrows when the sash is in up position;
FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic view similar to the sectional view shown in FIG. 2 showing air currents, by means of arrows, which flow when sash is in down position;
FIG. 4 is a diagrammatic view similar to FIG. 3, showing flow of air, by means of arrows, when the solid closure means is removed and the grille means is installed in place thereof and the intake collar is sealed;
FIG. 5 is another diagrammatic view similar to FIG. 4, showing the flow of air, by means of arrows, when the grille means is installed, the intake collar is sealed, and the sash is in down position; and
FIG. 6 is a detail of the top of the adjustable bafile showing the baflle and the top wall in section.
Similar numerals refer to similar parts throughout the several views.
My fumehood may be constructed of any material strong enough for the purpose. It is also desirable for the construction material to be fireproof and for the floor or counter of the device to be acid resistant. I, therefore, provide that the main frame Ill be made of enameled steel coated with acid resistant paint. The floor or counter 11, should be of a material such as stone, and suflicie-ntly thick to withstand acids, heat and dam-aging reactions. The floor 11 may be a separate counter-top over which the main frame 10 of the hood is placed, or it may be an integral part of the hood construction.
The main frame 10 has a rear wall d2, a top wall 13 and side walls 14 and 15. The fnont or face wall 16 is formed with a front or face opening 17 at the lower portion thereof and an upper opening 1 8 at the upper portion thereof adapted to contain or be closed by either a grille 19 or solid closure means 20. The areas of the face opening 17 and upper opening 18 should be substantially the same.
At the lower end of face opening 17, I provide a defiector 17a. This is desirable to permit entry of air at the bottom of the working space 31 when the sash is closed. Thus, when the sash is all the Way down, the bottom of sash 31 will be closed against the top of deflector 17a which still permits an air passage 171; through the bottom of the front of the device. When an experiment is set up within the hood, passageway 17b will prevent leakage of noxious material because it provides a passage for air to enter the device and leave through the exhaust duct.
The front Wall 17 has a forwardly and downwardly depending oifset portion 22 which is located between upper opening 18 and the face opening 17. This offset portion contains a series of perforated openings 23 through which air may move. Directly behind the oifset portion 22, there is an angled baffle means 25 which is set between walls 14 and 15 of the main frame iii. Sash guides or channels 26 and 27 are associated with walls 14 and 15 respectively to provide means for raising and lowering slideable panel means such as a glazed sash between the upper opening 13, the lower face opening 17, and the working chamber 28 of the device. The sash 30 is provided with a pane of safety glass 31, or wired glass, and is adapted to slide up and down within the sash guides 26 and 27. The height of the sash should be suflicient to cover the lower face opening 17 when completely lowered. The sash 30 may be maintained at various positions by balancing means such as a counterweight or sash balance cooperating with cable 3 6 attached to the upper end of sash 30.
I provide an exhaust collar 37 in the upper wall 13. Exhaust collar 37 communicates with working chamber 31, and may be attached to any suitable type of duct or other means which may be connected to an exhaust blower or other means of moving the air out of the Working chamber 28. I do not show the ducts or the exhaust pumps since these are well known to the art, and may be of any type suitable for the purpose.
At the upper front portion of the device, I provide an inner wall '40 which depends from top wall 13 to a point above the top of the sash 30 when the sash 30 is in lowermost position. This forms an auxiliary chamber 41 defined by either the grille 19 or the solid plate 20', the inner wall 40, the forward upper wall 13a, the side walls 14 and 15, and the bafiie 25. At the top of chamber 41, I provide an intake collar 39 through forward upper wall 13a.
The described construction also leaves an opening below inner wall and above angled baffie 25 designated by reference numeral 42. I also provide an internal angled baffie 43 disposed between upper bafiie holders 44 and lower baifie cleats 45. Baflie holders 44 and cleats 45 are attached to the main frame 10.
I provide stainless steel hooks 46 at either side of the rear of halide 43 which -fit into studs 46a positioned in walls 14 and 15 respectively. Thus, the bafile 43 is pivotally suspended on the studs 46a, and positioned in selected pivoting positions by means of choice of a slot 52 and the cooperating action of the hanger or holding means such as the bafile holders 44.
Baflie holders 44 comprise a stainless steel angled bolt 47 inserted through an appropriate hole 48 and maintained in depending position by means of a nut 49'. Lower part of angled bolt 47 is adapted to receive a wing nut 51). There is a lock nut on the angled bolt 47 to help hold it in place. The wing nut 51? may be substituted with an acid-resistant knurled knob with a threaded insert to fit over the end of angled bolt 47. Baflle 43 is thus held in place by means of the described assembly forming the holder 44. It is desirable to have an acid resistant washer 5 1 between the knurled knob and the baffle 43. It can thus be seen that by placing the lower end of the baflle 43 selectively in any one of the several cuts 52 of cleats 45 and adjusting the upper end of bafile 43 by means of the upper holders 44, the b-afiie 43 may be placed in a variety of adjustably selected positions.
I also find it desirable to have an angled baifle 55 disposed between a central portion of upper wall 13 and the forward portion of the Working chamber as shown in FIG. 2 of the drawings. This baffle 55 may be constructed of safety glass or wired glass and illumination, such as electric lamps in proper lamp sockets 55, may be placed above baffle 55 if it is desired to provide illumination. Otherwise baffle 55 may be made of asbestos board or any other corrosive resistant material, the same as bafile 43, or it may be made of steel or any other suit-able material.
The Device as an Air Conditioning Hood In order to use my fumehood as an air conditioning hood, a suitable duct is attached to intake collar 39 and connected to an input blower to provide an auxiliary air input for the device. Solid plate 20 is attached to the device to cover upper opening 18. The input blower and the exhaust blower (both not shown) are then turned on to provide a fiow of air as defined by the arrows in FIG. 3 of the drawings, when sash 30 is placed in down position.
It will be noted that chamber 41 is now formed as a plenum chamber, and the auxiliary air leaves chamber 41 at opening 42 to enter the working chamber 28. Although perforated openings 23 will remain open, the action of the input blower and the exhaust blower are such that the air will nevertheless principally flow through chamber 41 and out of opening 42 to exhaust working chamber 28. Some air will flow upwardly through perforations 23 through chamber 41 and out of opening 42, and some air will flow underneath deflector 1 7a and through air passage 17b. The inward flow through perforated openings '23 and through passageway =17b insures that there will be no outward flow of air carrying noxious material into the room. This also prevents an undesirable flow of air downwardly out of plenum chamber 41 into the room to disturb the 'air conditioned air with unconditioned air.
In the ideal air conditioned hood, approximately 25% to 50% of the air will be room air coming through the open face 17. When the sash is in down position, as in FIG. 3 of the drawings, approximately the same amount of air will then how upwardly through the perforations Z3, and inwardly through air passage 1712.
Let us assume now that it is necessary to raise the sash 30 in order for the technician to do something inside the working chamber 311. As the sash raises, it closes opening 42 forcing the entire flow of auxiliary air 41 through perforated openings 23 and downwardly across the front of the face opening 17 so that when the sash is entirely in up position, the flow of air will be as shown in FIG. 2 of the drawings. It will thus be seen that a suflicient amount of air is provided by the auxiliary air supply through chamber 41 to cover the entire face of the opening 17 on the outside of the device so that the exhaust blower will suck in mainly this auxiliary air in clearing out the working area 28, and thus, substantially all of the conditioned air is kept in the room, and is not dissipated through the fumehood. This will be the case even though the sash is completely up, and the entire opening 17 is open.
This construction also provides that none of the noxio-us material in the working chamber 28 may leave through any part of opening 17. The operation of the intake blower and the exhaust blower are designed to provide an average air velocity at the face opening 17 of approximately feet per minute. This, of course, can be varied by changing the speed of the blowers as well as the various openings and baffle arrangements.
The Device as a Constant Volume Fumehood If it is desired to use the device in an installation where there is no air conditioning problem, it is possible to eliminate the auxiliary air supply which is brought inthrough intake collar 3?. In order to accomplish this, intake collar 39 is sealed up by means of a valve (not shown) or by means-of a threaded cap 5-5 which may be screwed onto the intake collar 39 upon removal of the duct means or by any other sealing means.
Solid plate 26 is removed and replaced with a grille 19. Thus, chamber 4-1 is changed, and now when the sash is in down position, there is a free flow of air from the room through grille 19, through chamber 41, and through opening 42 as shown in FIG. 5 of the drawings.
When sash 39 is in upward position, the how of air would then be from a room through face opening 17 as shown in FIG. 4 of the drawings. Thus, by means of the simple expedient of closing off intake collar 39 and replacing solid arrangement Ztl with a grille element 19, the entire character of the device is changed from an air conditioning hood to a constant volume hood.
While I have described my invention in its preferred form, there are other forms which it may take without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention and I, therefore, desire to be protected for all forms coming within the claims apended hereinbelow.
Wherefore I claim:
1. A convertible fumehood having a main frame comprising a working chamber defined by at least one wall, and means at the front thereof to provide at least one face opening in the lower part of said front; an auxiliary chamber located above said face opening having a rear portion adjacent to the upper part of said front of the working chamber with at least one interchamber opening between the said working chamber and the said auxiliary chamber above the said face opening, and at least one outside opening in the said auxiliary chamber for communication from the said auxiliary chamber to outside the device; closure means comprising slideable panel means being suificiently large to cover said lower face opening and adapted to be moved on guide means on the main frame to selected positions relative to said face opening and said interchamber opening so that when said closure means is moved from said face opening to said interchamber opening, said face opening will be progressively uncovered and said interchamber opening will be progressively covered; said outside opening of said auxiliary chamber adapted to be selectively and alternatively fitted with a solid closure, or a closure with open communication means for gasses; said working chamber having exhaust means for exhausting gasses at an upper portion thereof, and said auxiliary chamber having input blower means connected through an input port and closure means to selectively close or open the said input port to the auxiliary chamber; said auxiliary chamber having a lower portion in the form of a bathe comprising at least one opening, said baflie extending from front to rear of said auxiliary chamber with the rear of said bathe located near an area between the said face opening and the said interchamber opening.
2. The convertible fumehood as defined in claim 1 in which the said slideable panel means comprises transparent material.
3. The convertible furnehood as defined in claim 1 in which the face opening is in a substantially vertical plane, and the said baffle forms an acute angle with the said vertical plane of the said face opening.
4. The convertible fumehood as defined in claim 3 in which the said exhaust means is located near the top of the said working chamber and the said input port is located near the top of the said auxiliary chamber, with said bafile means having a plurality of openings located at the bottom of the said auxiliary chamber, and the outside opening of said auxiliary chamber being located between the said input port and the said bafile.
5. The device as defined in claim 4 in which there is a passageway for gasses underneath the movable closure means and between it and the main frame of the device.
6. A convertible fumehood comprising: a main frame comprising a working chamber having exhaust means to remove gasses or airborne material from the said working chamber; at least one first opening and at least one second opening in tne said working chamber being adjacent each other and substantially aligned in planar relationship on a first plane; a closure means suficiently large to cover either of the said openings and adapted to be moved reciprocally on guide means to selected positions within the said main frame along a second plane relatively near and substantially parallel to the said first mentioned plane, ranging from a first selected position covering the first of said openings, then to a plurality of selected positions covering portions of the said first and second openings, then to a last selected position covering the second mentioned opening; said second mentioned opening communicating with a second chamber having communication means adapted to be selectively connected alternately to input blower means and to positive closure means and said second chamber having other means communicating with the atmosphere and adapted to be selectively alternately connected to positive closure means and to closure means having at least one opening for the passage of gasses; and said second chamber having at least one wall positioned at or near the said first mentioned opening in the said working chamber, said wall having at least one opening for the passage of gasses.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS

Claims (1)

1. A CONVERTIBLE FUMEHOOD HAVING A MAIN FRAME COMPRISING A WORKING CHAMBER DEFINED BY AT LEAST ONE WALL, AND MEANS AT THE FRONT THEREOF TO PROVIDE AT LEAST ONE FACE OPENING IN THE LOWER PART OF SAID FRONT; AN AUXILIARY CHAMBER LOCATED ABOVE SAID FACE OPENING HAVING A REAR PORTION ADJACENT TO THE UPPER PART OF SAID FRONT OF THE WORKING CHAMBER WITH AT LEAST ONE INTERCHAMBER OPENING BETWEEN THE SAID WORKING CHAMBER AND THE SAID AUXILIARY CHAMBER ABOVE THE SAID FACE OPENING, AND AT LEAST ONE OUTSIDE OPENING IN THE SAID AUXILIARY CHAMBER FOR COMMUNICATION FROM THE SAID AUXILIARY CHAMBER TO OUTSIDE THE DEVICE; CLOSURE MEANS COMPRISING SLIDEABLE PANEL MEANS BEING SUFFICIENTLY LARGE TO COVER SAID LOWER FACE OPENING AND ADAPTED TO BE MOVED ON GUIDE MEANS ON THE MAIN FRAME TO SELECTED POSITIONS RELATIVE TO SAID FACE OPENING AND SAID INTERCHAMBER OPENING SO THAT WHEN SAID CLOSURE MEANS IS MOVED FROM SAID FACE OPENING TO SAID INTERCHAMBER OPENING, SAIDFACE OPENING WILL BE PROGRESSIVELY UNCOVERED AND SAID INTERCHAMBER OPENING WILL BE PROGRESSIVELY COVERED; SAID OUTSIDE OPENINGOF SAID AUXILIARY CHAMBER ADAPTED TO BE SELECTIVELY AND ALTERNATIVELY FITTED WITH A SOLID CLOSURE, OR A CLOSURE WITH OPEN COMMUNICATION MEANS FOR GASSES; SAID WORKING CHAMBER HAVING EXHAUST MEANS FOR EXHAUSTING GASSES AT AN UPPER PORTION THEREOF, AND SAID AUXILIARY CHAMBER HAVING INPUT BLOWER MEANS CONNECTED THROUGH AN INPUT PORT AND CLOSURE MEANS TO SELECTIVELY CLOSE OR OPEN THE SAID INPUT PORT TO THE AUXILIARY CHAMBER; SAID AUXILIARY CHAMBER HAVING A LOWER PORTION IN THE FORM OF A BAFFLE COMPRISING AT LEAST ONE OPENING, SAID BAFFLE EXTENDING FROM FRONT TO REAR OF SAID AUXILIARY CHAMBER WITH THE REAR OF SAID BAFFLE LOCATED NEAR AN AREA BETWEEN THE SAID FACE OPENING AND THE SAID INTERCHAMBER OPENING.
US180608A 1962-03-19 1962-03-19 Convertible fumehood Expired - Lifetime US3111077A (en)

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Cited By (26)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3217630A (en) * 1963-02-20 1965-11-16 Hamilton Mfg Co Fume hood construction
US3218953A (en) * 1963-02-21 1965-11-23 Hamilton Mfg Co Fume hood construction
US3237548A (en) * 1964-01-23 1966-03-01 Bayern Joseph Fumehood with auxiliary air supply
US3260189A (en) * 1963-10-29 1966-07-12 Donald D Jensen Ventilation system
US3340788A (en) * 1966-02-28 1967-09-12 Lab Construction Company Fume hood including air deflecting baffle
US3378963A (en) * 1964-07-30 1968-04-23 Univ Southern Illinois Science building layout and equipment
US3408914A (en) * 1967-02-06 1968-11-05 Bayern Joseph Fumehood with auxiliary air supply and by-pass conduit means
US3496857A (en) * 1967-08-25 1970-02-24 Nat Res Dev Fume cupboards
US3747505A (en) * 1972-02-18 1973-07-24 American Hospital Supply Corp Air flow system for fume hood
US3747504A (en) * 1971-08-18 1973-07-24 American Hospital Supply Corp Fume hood
US3897721A (en) * 1973-04-09 1975-08-05 Rochelle Corp Fumehood with compensating air supply
US4023473A (en) * 1976-05-06 1977-05-17 Laboratory Furniture, Inc. Fume hood
US4266528A (en) * 1978-12-13 1981-05-12 The Celotex Corporation Ducted/ductless range hood
US4399741A (en) * 1979-12-14 1983-08-23 Hamilton Industries, Inc. Method of controlling room air flow into a fume hood
US4399740A (en) * 1979-12-14 1983-08-23 Hamilton Industries, Inc. Fume hood with dual room air inlet systems
US4534281A (en) * 1983-09-26 1985-08-13 Labconco Corporation Laboratory fume hood
US4741257A (en) * 1985-01-09 1988-05-03 Air Monitor Corporation Fume hood air flow control
US4785722A (en) * 1987-07-28 1988-11-22 Hamilton Industries Fume hood with step baffles
US4856420A (en) * 1988-06-20 1989-08-15 Kewaunee Scientific Corporation Fume hood
US5074198A (en) * 1988-06-10 1991-12-24 Halton Oy Focussed ventilation procedure for a work spot and apparatus used in the procedure
US5797790A (en) * 1995-12-15 1998-08-25 Kewaunee Scientific Corporation Fume hood
US6659857B2 (en) 2001-07-11 2003-12-09 Flow Sciences, Inc. Turbulence-free laboratory safety enclosure
US20060149254A1 (en) * 2004-12-13 2006-07-06 St. Francis Medical Technologies, Inc. Inter-cervical facet implant and method for preserving the tissues surrounding the facet joint
US20070087677A1 (en) * 2005-10-14 2007-04-19 Morris Robert H Converting existing prior art fume hoods into high performance low airflow stable vortex fume hoods
US20120052784A1 (en) * 2010-08-27 2012-03-01 Smith Thomas C Airfoil and Baffle Assemblies that Reduce Airflow Requirements for Fume Hoods and Fume Hoods Incorporating Same
US10493505B2 (en) 2016-06-14 2019-12-03 3Flow, Inc. Fume hood with horizontally moveable panels

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2819666A (en) * 1955-12-14 1958-01-14 Kirk & Blum Mfg Company Laboratory fume hood
US3000292A (en) * 1958-01-23 1961-09-19 Norbute Corp Fume hood

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2819666A (en) * 1955-12-14 1958-01-14 Kirk & Blum Mfg Company Laboratory fume hood
US3000292A (en) * 1958-01-23 1961-09-19 Norbute Corp Fume hood

Cited By (33)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3217630A (en) * 1963-02-20 1965-11-16 Hamilton Mfg Co Fume hood construction
US3218953A (en) * 1963-02-21 1965-11-23 Hamilton Mfg Co Fume hood construction
US3260189A (en) * 1963-10-29 1966-07-12 Donald D Jensen Ventilation system
US3237548A (en) * 1964-01-23 1966-03-01 Bayern Joseph Fumehood with auxiliary air supply
US3378963A (en) * 1964-07-30 1968-04-23 Univ Southern Illinois Science building layout and equipment
US3340788A (en) * 1966-02-28 1967-09-12 Lab Construction Company Fume hood including air deflecting baffle
US3408914A (en) * 1967-02-06 1968-11-05 Bayern Joseph Fumehood with auxiliary air supply and by-pass conduit means
US3496857A (en) * 1967-08-25 1970-02-24 Nat Res Dev Fume cupboards
US3747504A (en) * 1971-08-18 1973-07-24 American Hospital Supply Corp Fume hood
US3747505A (en) * 1972-02-18 1973-07-24 American Hospital Supply Corp Air flow system for fume hood
US3897721A (en) * 1973-04-09 1975-08-05 Rochelle Corp Fumehood with compensating air supply
US4023473A (en) * 1976-05-06 1977-05-17 Laboratory Furniture, Inc. Fume hood
US4266528A (en) * 1978-12-13 1981-05-12 The Celotex Corporation Ducted/ductless range hood
US4399741A (en) * 1979-12-14 1983-08-23 Hamilton Industries, Inc. Method of controlling room air flow into a fume hood
US4399740A (en) * 1979-12-14 1983-08-23 Hamilton Industries, Inc. Fume hood with dual room air inlet systems
US4534281A (en) * 1983-09-26 1985-08-13 Labconco Corporation Laboratory fume hood
US4741257A (en) * 1985-01-09 1988-05-03 Air Monitor Corporation Fume hood air flow control
US4785722A (en) * 1987-07-28 1988-11-22 Hamilton Industries Fume hood with step baffles
US5074198A (en) * 1988-06-10 1991-12-24 Halton Oy Focussed ventilation procedure for a work spot and apparatus used in the procedure
US4856420A (en) * 1988-06-20 1989-08-15 Kewaunee Scientific Corporation Fume hood
US5797790A (en) * 1995-12-15 1998-08-25 Kewaunee Scientific Corporation Fume hood
US7217183B2 (en) 2001-07-11 2007-05-15 Flow Sciences, Inc. Turbulence-free laboratory safety enclosure
US6659857B2 (en) 2001-07-11 2003-12-09 Flow Sciences, Inc. Turbulence-free laboratory safety enclosure
US20040082292A1 (en) * 2001-07-11 2004-04-29 Ryan Raymond F. Turbulence-free laboratory safety enclosure
US6871170B2 (en) 2001-07-11 2005-03-22 Flow Sciences, Inc. Turbulence-free laboratory safety enclosure
US20050164622A1 (en) * 2001-07-11 2005-07-28 Flow Sciences, Inc. Turbulence-free laboratory safety enclosure
US20060149254A1 (en) * 2004-12-13 2006-07-06 St. Francis Medical Technologies, Inc. Inter-cervical facet implant and method for preserving the tissues surrounding the facet joint
US20070087677A1 (en) * 2005-10-14 2007-04-19 Morris Robert H Converting existing prior art fume hoods into high performance low airflow stable vortex fume hoods
US7470176B2 (en) 2005-10-14 2008-12-30 Flow Safe Inc Converting existing prior art fume hoods into high performance low airflow stable vortex fume hoods
US20120052784A1 (en) * 2010-08-27 2012-03-01 Smith Thomas C Airfoil and Baffle Assemblies that Reduce Airflow Requirements for Fume Hoods and Fume Hoods Incorporating Same
US9056339B2 (en) * 2010-08-27 2015-06-16 Exposure Control Technologies, Inc. Airfoil and baffle assemblies that reduce airflow requirements for fume hoods and fume hoods incorporating same
US10493505B2 (en) 2016-06-14 2019-12-03 3Flow, Inc. Fume hood with horizontally moveable panels
US11331701B2 (en) 2016-06-14 2022-05-17 3Flow, Inc. Fume hood with baffle assembly

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