US3182165A - Oven for heating objects by microwaves - Google Patents

Oven for heating objects by microwaves Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3182165A
US3182165A US193138A US19313862A US3182165A US 3182165 A US3182165 A US 3182165A US 193138 A US193138 A US 193138A US 19313862 A US19313862 A US 19313862A US 3182165 A US3182165 A US 3182165A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
energy
high frequency
container
liquid
incident
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
US193138A
Inventor
Helm Johan Posthuma Van Der
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.)
US Philips Corp
North American Philips Co Inc
Original Assignee
US Philips Corp
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 US Philips Corp filed Critical US Philips Corp
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3182165A publication Critical patent/US3182165A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B6/00Heating by electric, magnetic or electromagnetic fields
    • H05B6/64Heating using microwaves
    • H05B6/80Apparatus for specific applications
    • H05B6/802Apparatus for specific applications for heating fluids

Description

May 4, 1965 J. P. VAN DER HELM 3,182,165
ovEN FoR HEATING OBJECTS BY MIcRowAvEs X Filed May s, 1962 INVENTOR W PGEN I United States Patent O "ice 3 182,165 OVEN FOR HEATINGOBJECTS BY MICROWAVES Johan Posthuma van der Helm, Eindhoven, Netherlands, assignor to North American Philips Company, luc., New York, N.Y., a corporation of Delaware Filed May 8, 1962, Ser. No. 193,138 Claims priority, application ietherlands, May 26, 1961, 265, 72 12 Claims. (Cl. 219-10.55)
This invention relates to microwave heating devices and more particularly to apparatus of this type for heating objects carried on a conveyer belt along a radiator of microwave energy.
In known devices of this kind, which are frequently referred to as continuous-passage ovens and which are used inter alia for heating previously prepared foods to the desired temperature, the oven proper usually comprises a cylindrical parabolic mirror in the focal line of which a radiator of microwave energy supplied by a magnetron or other generator of micro-waves is arranged. The open side of the mirror is directed towards the conveyer belt and under the latter a container lled with high frequency energy absorbent material is placed. This material must be capable of absorbing the major part of the radiant energy if nothing lies on the conveyer belt so that it is necessary to provide means for cooling the ablsorbent material.
The simplest method would be to provide for circulation of a cooling liquid which itself serves as the said absorbent material. However, this involves the difficulty that in the container, which is filled wholly or in part with liquid, the liquid surface reflects the waves striking it to -a considerable extent so that the energy emitted by the radiator cannot be absorbed suiciently by the liquid.
According to the invention, an inclined liquid surface is maintained below the conveyer belt with respect to the incident radiation, so that micro-waves from the generator striking the said surface are absorbed by multiple reiiections in inclined directions.
The liquid surface may exhibit a shape according to one or more wedge-shaped broken faces.
In one preferred embodiment of the invention a cooling vessel, open at the upper side, is placed below the conveyer belt and opposite the radiator. The cooling vessel has a shape such that the surface of a cooling liquid 'led through the vessel, which is adjacent the conveyer belt, shows a stepwise variation.
According to the invention, the cooling vessel may advantageously be shaped so that the height of each liquid step is greater than the width thereof. The cooling vessel may be divided by means of vertical partitions into compartments each having a width equal to that tof one step, the member for the liquid supply being secured to that compartment which corresponds to the upper step of the liquid stairs. Preferably, the liquid steps are so narrow that micro-waves from the radiator striking the steps are dispersed due to meniscus formation on the steps.
In order that the invention may readily be carried into effect, it will now be described in detail, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawing, in which FIGURES 1 and 2 show two embodiments of the invention having different cooling vessels.
Microwave energy preferably having a wave length of from to 15 cms. is emitted by a line radiator 1 positioned in the focal line of a parabolic cylindrical mirror 2 and are directed by this mirror towards a limited surface area of a moving conveyer belt 3 on which the objects to be heated, for example, dishes 4 containing foodstuffs, are passed along the radiator 1.
The details of this arrangement are more fully dis- 3,182,165 Patented May 4, 1965 closed in a copending United States patent application Serial No. 26,235, filed May 2, 1960 and entitled High Frequency Heating Furnaces Operating With Very High Frequencies, now U.S. Patent 3,102,181.
A cooling vessel 5 is provided below the conveyer belt 3 having a plurality of vertical partitions 6 decreasing in height in a stepwise manner, resulting in a plurality of juxtaposed compartments 7 being formed which are open at their upper wall and decrease in height in a stepwise manner. The top of the vessel 5 may be open or may be covered with a material which is substantially transparent to high frequency electromagnetic energy. In either case, the upper surface of vessel 5 is effectively open to the passage of the high frequency energy. A cooling liquid, for example, water, is supplied through the highest of the compartments through an inlet pipe 8. As soon as this compartment is lled, it flows over into the next one, and so forth, until all the compartments are wholly filled. With continued supply the water may flow away through an outlet pipe 9. A water staircase is thus formed as it were at the upper ends of the compartments. The height of the steps of this staircase is preferably to be chosen greater than the width thereof and the latter preferably not greater than from 0.5 to 1 cm. This causes a slanting overow in which the liquid steps acquire rounded corners due to meniscus formation. A frequent reflection in inclined directions of the incoming waves is thus enhanced.
The device shown in FIGURE 2 differs from that of FIGURE l only in that the highest compartment, now indicated by 10, lies in the middle of the cooling vessel, so that the water falls down therefrom to two sides in inclined directions.
What is claimed is:
1. High frequency heating apparatus comprising a heating chamber, means for radiating high frequency electromagnetic energy Within said chamber, means for absorbing said high frequency energy, means for supporting a substance to be heated between said energy radiating means and said energy absorbing means and in the path of said high frequency energy, said energy absorbing means comprising a liquid container having an open end and arranged in the path of said high frequency energy, and means for providing within said container an inclined liquid surface in the form of a plurality of steps at progressively different distances from said radiating means, said liquid surface being thereby inclined with respect to the high frequency energy incident thereon whereby a substantial portion of said high frequency energy impinging upon said liquid surface is absorbed thereby due to multiple reflections of said energy within said container.
2. High' frequency heating apparatus comprising a heating chamber having walls of electrically conductive material, means for radiating microwave electromagnetic energy within said chamber to establish therein an electromagnetic eld, a container having an open end facing said energy radiating means, means for supporting a material to be heated between said energy radiating means and said container, said container comprising an inlet port and an outlet port for continuously passing a cooling liquid through said container and means for causing said liquid to cascade down through ,said container so that the surface thereof facing said energy radiating means exhibits a stepped variation whereby the microwave energy impinging thereon is substantially absorbed.
3. High frequency heating apparatus comprising a heating chamber having walls of electrically conductive material, means for radiating microwave electromagnetic energy within said chamber to establish therein an electromagnetic eld, a container having an open end facing said energy radiating means, means for supporting a material to be heated between said energy radiating means and said container, said container comprising an inlet port and an outlet port for passing a cooling liquid through said container and means for causing said liquid to cascade down through said container so that the surface thereof facing said energy radiating means exhibits a stepped variation in which the height of each liquid step is greater than its width, whereby the microwave energy impinging thereon is substantially absorbed.
4. In a high frequency heating apparatus having energy waveguide means, means for raidating high frequency electromagnetic energy within said waveguide and means to support a material to be heated in the path of said high frequency energy, apparatus for absorbing'said high frequency energy comprising a container adjacent to said waveguide means and having an open end facing said energy radiating means and located on the side of said material to be heated away from said energy radiating means, said container comprising a plurality of vertical partitions dividing said container into compartments of varying heights and an inlet port and an outlet port for passing a liquid coolant through said container, said inlet Vport opening into that compartment having the highest partition thereby providing an inclined liquid surface exhibiting a stepped Variation whereby the energy incident thereon is substantially absorbed by multiple reflections thereof within said container.
5. Apparatus as described in claim 4 wherein the width of each of said compartments corresponds to the width of the corresponding step of said liquid surface.
6. High frequency heating apparatus comprising a heating chamber, means for radiating high frequency electromagnetic energy within said chamber, means for absorbing said high frequency energy, means for supporting Va substance to be heated between said energy radiating means and said energy absorbing means and in the path of said high frequency energy, said energy absorbing means Varranged in the path of said high frequency energy, said container further comprising a plurality of vertical par-V titions dividing said container into compartments of pro*- gressively varying heights and an inlet port and an outlet port for passing a liquid coolant through said container, said inlet port opening into that compartment having the highest partition thereby providing an inclined liquid surface exhibiting a stepped variation, said partitions being closely spaced to one another to provide a meniscus formation on said stepped liquid surface whereby the energy incident thereon is dispersed so as to be substantially absorbed by multiple reflections thereof within said container. y
7. Apparatus as described in claim 6 wherein said Verr,tical partitions progressively decrease in height in a stepped `8. Apparatus as described in claim 6 wherein said vertical partitions progressively decrease in height from an area near the center of said container to each of the outer walls thereof.
9. High frequency heating apparatus comprising a waveguide enclosure having an open end, means for radiating high frequency electromagnetic energy within said enclosure, means for absorbing said high frequency energy, conveyor means for carrying an object to be heated past the open end of said enclosure, said energy absorbing means comprising a liquid container having an open end adjacent and facing said open end of said enclosure and in the path of said high frequency energy, said container further comprising a plurality of vertical partitions of progressively varying heights dividing said container into compartments of progressively varying heights and an inlet port and an outlet port for passing a liquid coolant through said container, said inlet port opening into that compartment having the highest partition thereby providingvan inclined liquid surface exhibiting a stepped variation whereby the energy incident thereon is substantially absorbed by multiple reflections thereof within said container.
l0. Apparatus as described in claim 9 in which the difference in height between adjacent partitions is greater than the spacing between said partitions.
11. Apparatus as described in claim 10 wherein the spacing between partitions is of the order of one half to one centimeter.
l2. High frequency heating apparatus comprising a waveguide enclosure, means for supplyinghigh frequency electromagnetic energy having a given direction of propagation to said enclosure, energy absorbing means arranged in the path of said high frequency energy, means for supporting a substance to be heatedV between said energy supply means and said energy absorbing means and in the path 'of said high frequency energy, said energy absorbent means comprising a liquid container holding a dielectric liquid therein, exposed to the incident energy, and means for providing an inclined liquid surface within said container facing and inclined with respect toV said direction of propagation of the'incident high frequency energy so that a substantial portion of said incident energy is absorbed by said liquid due to dielectric heating thereof by means of lmultiple reflections of Vsaid energy within said container produced by said inclined liquid surface.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,627,571 2/l53 VHiehle et al 219--1'055 2,894,2l9v 7/59 Frederic() 333--22 2,958,830 ll/6O Bird et al. 2l9--l0.55
'FornitoriY PATENTS 1,255,297 l/61 France.
menant) M. woon, Primary Examiner.

Claims (1)

12. HIGH FREQUENCY HEATING APPARATUS COMPRISING A WAVEGUIDE ENCLOSURE, MEANS FOR SUPPLYING HIGH FREQUENCY ELECTROMAGNETIC ENERGY HAVING A GIVEN DIRECTION OF PROPAGATION TO SAID ENCLOSURE, ENERGY ABSORBING MEANS ARRANGED IN THE PATH OF SAID HIGH FREQUENCY ENERGY, MEANS FOR SUPPORTING A SUBSTANCE TO BE HEATED BETWEEN SAID ENERGY SUPPLY MEANS AND SAID ENERGY ABSORBING MEANS AND IN THE PATH OF SAID HIGH FREQUENCY ENERGY, SAID ENERGY ABSORBENT MEANS COMPRISING A LIQUID CONTAINER HOLDING A DIELECTRIC LIQUID THEREIN, EXPOSED TO HE INCIDENT ENERGY, AND MEANS FOR PROVIDING AN INCLINED LIQUID SURFACE WITHIN SAID CONTAINER FACING AND INCLINED WITH RESPECT TO SAID DIRECTION OF PROPAGATION OF THE INCIDENT HIGH FREQUENCY ENERGY SO THAT A SUBSTANTIAL PORTION OF SAID INCIDENT ENERGY IS ABSORBED BY SAID LIQUID DUE TO DIELECTRIC HEATING THREOF BY MEANS OF MULTIPLE REFLECTIONS OF SAID ENERGY WITHIN SAID CONTAINER PRODUCED BY SID INCLINED LIQUID SURFACE.
US193138A 1961-05-26 1962-05-08 Oven for heating objects by microwaves Expired - Lifetime US3182165A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NL265172 1961-05-26

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3182165A true US3182165A (en) 1965-05-04

Family

ID=19753060

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US193138A Expired - Lifetime US3182165A (en) 1961-05-26 1962-05-08 Oven for heating objects by microwaves

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US3182165A (en)
GB (1) GB961890A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3335253A (en) * 1963-09-11 1967-08-08 Cryodry Corp Microwave heating of substances under hydrostatic pressure
US3365562A (en) * 1962-12-17 1968-01-23 Cryodry Corp Apparatus and process for microwave treatment
US3472200A (en) * 1964-05-15 1969-10-14 Litton Industries Inc Striping apparatus for highways
US4625089A (en) * 1985-11-07 1986-11-25 Gics Paul W Water load container device for a microwave heat applicator

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2627571A (en) * 1948-11-02 1953-02-03 Gen Electric Choke joint high-frequency heater
US2894219A (en) * 1955-03-18 1959-07-07 Blossy D Frederico Co-axial resistive load
US2958830A (en) * 1954-10-04 1960-11-01 Bird Electronic Corp Coaxial line load device
FR1255297A (en) * 1959-05-01 1961-03-03 Philips Nv High frequency furnace for heating using ultra-high frequency oscillations

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2627571A (en) * 1948-11-02 1953-02-03 Gen Electric Choke joint high-frequency heater
US2958830A (en) * 1954-10-04 1960-11-01 Bird Electronic Corp Coaxial line load device
US2894219A (en) * 1955-03-18 1959-07-07 Blossy D Frederico Co-axial resistive load
FR1255297A (en) * 1959-05-01 1961-03-03 Philips Nv High frequency furnace for heating using ultra-high frequency oscillations

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3365562A (en) * 1962-12-17 1968-01-23 Cryodry Corp Apparatus and process for microwave treatment
US3335253A (en) * 1963-09-11 1967-08-08 Cryodry Corp Microwave heating of substances under hydrostatic pressure
US3472200A (en) * 1964-05-15 1969-10-14 Litton Industries Inc Striping apparatus for highways
US4625089A (en) * 1985-11-07 1986-11-25 Gics Paul W Water load container device for a microwave heat applicator

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB961890A (en) 1964-06-24

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3271169A (en) Food package for microwave heating
US3857009A (en) Microwave browning means
AU619919B2 (en) Improved microwave-powered heating device
US4746968A (en) Combined microwave and thermal drying apparatus
US3934106A (en) Microwave browning means
US2820127A (en) Microwave cookers
US3263052A (en) Power distribution system for microwave process chambers
US4004122A (en) Multi-zone microwave heating apparatus
US4335290A (en) Microwave oven blower radiator
US4045638A (en) Continuous flow heat treating apparatus using microwaves
US4622448A (en) Microwave vacuum dryer apparatus
US3230864A (en) Microwave cooking
US3127494A (en) Microwave heating apparatus
US4495392A (en) Microwave simmer pot
US2888543A (en) Electronic heating apparatus
US3941968A (en) Microwave browning plate
GB926958A (en) Improvements in apparatus for heating substances and objects by means of micro-waves
US3820525A (en) Radiation and convection heated oven
US2813185A (en) Heating devices
GB1501973A (en) Microwave heating apparatus
US2827537A (en) Electronic heating apparatus
EP0027471B1 (en) High-frequency heating device
US3182165A (en) Oven for heating objects by microwaves
US5514853A (en) Microwave tunnel heating apparatus
US3532847A (en) Device for heating non-metallic material