US3350994A - Air curtain, ventilating system and air pump therefor - Google Patents

Air curtain, ventilating system and air pump therefor Download PDF

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US3350994A
US3350994A US503071A US50307165A US3350994A US 3350994 A US3350994 A US 3350994A US 503071 A US503071 A US 503071A US 50307165 A US50307165 A US 50307165A US 3350994 A US3350994 A US 3350994A
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air
casing
opening
throughout
air pump
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Guibert Raul
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COLMAN ROBERT
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Guibert Raul
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Assigned to COLMAN, ROBERT reassignment COLMAN, ROBERT ASSIGNMENT OF 1/2 OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST Assignors: GUIBERT, RAUL
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F9/00Use of air currents for screening, e.g. air curtains

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  • An object of this invention is to provide an attractive, noiseless, efficient, economical air curtain and ventilating system which may be inconspicuously incorporated into a door frame when a building is being constructed, or neatly arranged beside the door frame at some later time, or used in any opening.
  • Another object of this invention is to form two spacedapart, direct paths for air currents from each side across the narrow dimension of a door frame rather than causing the air to flow across the long dimension of the door opening.
  • a further object is to provide an air pump having a series of pivoted wings or sliding vanes which collect the air noiselessly within a casing without the wings contacting the sides of the casing and creating noise,
  • the high air velocity zone is generally understood to be about 2 feet, 6 inches, with the remaining 4 feet, 2 inches of low velocity due to the loss of air speed, the cone-like pattern which develops, and the poor suction through the floor grate. Even if the pressure in the top header is increased, the effective air throw generally cannot be spread beyond 4 feet. Hence, in both types an ineffective zone results, which is particularly noticeable where a floor inlet and expensive duct arrangement is not used.
  • Air curtain is 100% effective throughout entire opening.
  • FIG. 1 shows the invention installed in a doorway.
  • FIG. 2 is a partial sectional view of FIG. 1, showing doors attached to the wall, and illustrating the flow of air.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates the air pump taken on the line 3-3 of FIG. 4, while FIG. 4 is a section taken on the line 44 of FIG. 3.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates a modified form of air pump having sliding vanes instead of pivoted arms.
  • numeral 1 indicates a wall to which doors 2 are attached, and ventilating casings 3, preferably aluminum extrusions.
  • These ventilating casings 3 have a large inlet opening 4 and a small outlet 5, both extending throughout the entire length of the casing.
  • the outlet 5 is narrow in a transverse direction, it covers substantial area since it extends uninterruptedly the full length of the casing.
  • the rotor assembly is turned by any suitable means, such as by individual motors 11, or by a common motor 12 with a V-belt, flexible shaft, chain drive, or some other commonly accepted power means, and is positioned off center with respect to the casing in order to compress and speed up the air flow.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates a modified form of the invention in which rotor 13 has sliding vanes 14 positioned in slots formed in the rotor.
  • the vanes or fins are retained in the slots by rollers at their ends (not shown) similar to rollers 8 operating in a track or recess as illustrated in FIG. 4 in connection with the pivoted wings having enlarged rod-like edges 17.
  • the long, narrow jet opening 5 will throw out a stream of air at high velocity 15 toward the inlet side 6 of the casing on the opposite side of the doorway.
  • the air 16 will enter the inlet of the opposite casing, and in turn will be thrown back toward the original casing, and the cycle repeated. Since jets come from both sides of the narrow opening, only one-half of the throw is necessary as in the prior air curtains. Obviously, protective screens against childrens hands, or dirt may be provided.
  • arms 7 and vanes 14
  • arms 7 be continuous throughout the entire height of the casing and only one roller be used for each arm, .if desired, rollers may be used at each end of the casing.
  • the arms may be split into an upper and lower half, if desired, with a roller bearing to guide each half of the arm.
  • a bottom end plate with thrust bearing (not shown) is also provided.
  • Hinged wings or sliding vanes in the centrifugal air pump have no friction against outer casing.
  • An important feature is that a very close adjustment or tolerance can be made, and continuously maintained, between the edges of the wings and the casing, since there is no wear.
  • Air pump rotor Air pump rotor, and the slots for supply and return air are continuous throughout the entire length of the unit.
  • Heating, cooling or air filter elements could easily be located in the suction side of the pump, without changing the size or shape.
  • ventilating when ventilating occurs, it also includes air curtains for any type of opening including, but not limited to, industrial uses, such as, industrial heating ovens to retain the heat in the ovens, etc.
  • a method for forming an air curtain in an opening in a structure by provding a transverse, high velocity jet of air from one side of the opening to the other side, collecting in a casing a large volume of air through a relatively large opening extending uninterruptedly throughout substantially the entire height of the casing structure opening at the opposite side thereof, moving said large volume of air by an air pump inside the casing and having arms extending continuously throughout substantially the length of the casing, compressing the volume of air, and passing said compressed air at high jet velocity through a relatively narrow opening extending uninterruptedly throughout the entire height of the casing and structure opening toward said opposite side of the structure in a separate path spaced from, but substantially parallel to, a path taken by the incoming air to said relatively large opening.
  • a method for forming an air curtain in a doorway by providing a transverse, high velocity jet of air from one side of the doorway to the other side of the doorway, gradually increasing the velocity of the air after it has passed the midpoint therebetween by being affected by the intake suction at the opposite side, collecting a large volume of air through a relatively large uninterrupted opening extending substantially throughout the entire height of the doorway at the opposite side thereof, moving said large volume of air by an air pump adjacent the door casing, compressing the volume of air, and passing said compressed air at high jet velocity through a relatively narrow opening extending substantially throughout the entire height of the doorway toward the opposite side of the doorway in a separate path spaced from but adjacent to the path taken by the incoming air to said large opening.
  • An air curtain system comprising a vertically arranged casing on each side of a door opening, an elongated rotor within each said casing extending the length of the casing, and having outwardly extending vanes throughout its length to move air through said casing, said casing having a relatively wide intake opening extending the full length of said casing, and a relatively narrow outlet slot extending the full length of said casing on the other side of said casing and means to rotate said rotor whereby two separate anddistinct, spaced apart, curtains of air moving in opposite, substantially parallel directions will be provided'throughout the entire door opening.
  • a system a set forth in claim 3, wherein the said rotor is eccentrically mounted and will gather and compress the air so that a high velocity jet stream will be provided.
  • vanes are pivotally connected to said rotor and are thrown out by centrifugal force to such a point that they almost touch the sides of the casing.
  • a vertical casing adapted to be positioned along the side of a doorway as set forth in claim 3, said elongated rotor being eccentrically mounted in said casing and having pivotally positioned around its circumference a series of continuous arms extending substantially throughout the entire length of said casing whereby two spaced apart, oppositely moving, paths of air will be provided.
  • a vertical casing adapted to be positioned along the side of a doorway comprising a large inlet opening and a small outlet opening as set forth in claim 3, said rotor being eccentrically mounted in said casing and having pivotally positioned around its circumference a series of elongated arms extending substantially throughout the entire length of said casing, a header for said casing positioned above said arms and having a circular track in the lower side thereof, a roller positioned above and at the outer edge of each of said arms and engaging said track, power to drive said rotor whereby the collecting arms will gather a large quantity of air entering through the inlet and will condense and propel it from the outlet, whereby a constant stream of air will proceed from said casing.
  • An air curtain system comprising a vertically arranged casing on each side of a door opening, each of said casings having a relatively wide intake opening extending the full length of said casing, and a relatively narrow outlet slot extending the full length of said casing adjacent said intake opening, said wide intake opening in one casing being positioned opposite said narrow outlet opening in the other casing whereby two spaced apart, oppositely moving, curtains of air will be provided, a rotor in .said casing, air sweeping wings having an enlarged longitudinal edge thereof pivoted in sockets in said rotor, and rotatable bearings carried adjacent the opposite edge of said wings, and the space between said casing and said wings being finely adjusted and exceedingly narrow since no wear occurs on the edges of the wings or the casing.

Description

1967 R. GUIBERT 3,350,994
AIR CURTAIN, VENTILATING SYSTEM AND AIR PUMP THEREFOR Filed 001;. 23, 1965 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 W I I 2- INVENTOR RAUL GUIBERT Nov. 7, 1967 R. GUIBERT AIR CURTAIN, VENTILATING SYSTEM AND AIR PUMP THEREFOR Filed 001:. 23, 1965 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 FIG; 3.
INVENTOR RAUL GUIBERT f -fiM- ATTORNEY.
United States Patent 3,350,994 AIR CURTAIN, VENTILATING SYSTEM AND AIR PUMP THEREFOR Raul Guihert, East End Ave, New York, NY. 10021 Fiietl Oct. 23, 1965, Ser. No. 503,071 11 Claims. (Cl. 9836) An object of this invention is to provide an attractive, noiseless, efficient, economical air curtain and ventilating system which may be inconspicuously incorporated into a door frame when a building is being constructed, or neatly arranged beside the door frame at some later time, or used in any opening.
Another object of this invention is to form two spacedapart, direct paths for air currents from each side across the narrow dimension of a door frame rather than causing the air to flow across the long dimension of the door opening.
A further object is to provide an air pump having a series of pivoted wings or sliding vanes which collect the air noiselessly within a casing without the wings contacting the sides of the casing and creating noise,
With the foregoing and other objects in view as will appear from a reading of the following specification and claims, the invention resides in the novel arrangement and combination of parts and in the details of construction and process of manufacture hereinafter described and claimed, it being understood that changes in the precise embodiment of the invention may be made within the scope of what is claimed without departing from the spirit of the invention. It will be further understood that the invention is susceptible of embodiment in many and various forms, some of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawing, and that the structural details or particular steps of the method herein set forth may be varied to suit 'particular purposes and still remain within the inventive concept.
In the conventional prior art systems, air has been distributed from a top header downwardly along the long dimension of the doorway. In certain expensive installations, a large inlet has been built into the floor and the air recirculated to the top header by means of a pump and an elaborate duct system.
Since the height of the doorway is generally 6 feet, 8
inches or higher, the high air velocity zone is generally understood to be about 2 feet, 6 inches, with the remaining 4 feet, 2 inches of low velocity due to the loss of air speed, the cone-like pattern which develops, and the poor suction through the floor grate. Even if the pressure in the top header is increased, the effective air throw generally cannot be spread beyond 4 feet. Hence, in both types an ineffective zone results, which is particularly noticeable where a floor inlet and expensive duct arrangement is not used. I
The main features of this invention over the prior art systems may be listed as follows:
(1) Air curtain is 100% effective throughout entire opening.-
(2) Equal air velocities throughout the height (supply and return).
(3) Ducts are not required.
3,350,994 Patented Nov. 7, 1967 ice Referring to the figures:
FIG. 1 shows the invention installed in a doorway.
FIG. 2 is a partial sectional view of FIG. 1, showing doors attached to the wall, and illustrating the flow of air.
FIG. 3 illustrates the air pump taken on the line 3-3 of FIG. 4, while FIG. 4 is a section taken on the line 44 of FIG. 3.
FIG. 5 illustrates a modified form of air pump having sliding vanes instead of pivoted arms.
Referring to FIGURES l and 2, numeral 1 indicates a wall to which doors 2 are attached, and ventilating casings 3, preferably aluminum extrusions. These ventilating casings 3 have a large inlet opening 4 and a small outlet 5, both extending throughout the entire length of the casing. Hence, while the outlet 5 is narrow in a transverse direction, it covers substantial area since it extends uninterruptedly the full length of the casing.
After air passes through inlet 4, past optional heating or cooling coils 18, and through the throat 6, it is collected by pivoted arms or wings 7, compressed, and forced out through outlet 5 at great velocity. The arms in sweeping the air around the casing are prevented from touching the side thereof by positioning rollers or ball bearings 8 journalled in the ends thereof. These rollers ride in a track or recess in the end plate or head 9 of the casing which surrounds a self lubricating hearing, The arms are connected to the rotor 10 of a centrifugal pump by means of a rod and socket joint 17.
The rotor assembly is turned by any suitable means, such as by individual motors 11, or by a common motor 12 with a V-belt, flexible shaft, chain drive, or some other commonly accepted power means, and is positioned off center with respect to the casing in order to compress and speed up the air flow.
FIG. 5 illustrates a modified form of the invention in which rotor 13 has sliding vanes 14 positioned in slots formed in the rotor. The vanes or fins are retained in the slots by rollers at their ends (not shown) similar to rollers 8 operating in a track or recess as illustrated in FIG. 4 in connection with the pivoted wings having enlarged rod-like edges 17.
As can be seen in FIGS. 1 and 2, the long, narrow jet opening 5 will throw out a stream of air at high velocity 15 toward the inlet side 6 of the casing on the opposite side of the doorway. Here the air 16 will enter the inlet of the opposite casing, and in turn will be thrown back toward the original casing, and the cycle repeated. Since jets come from both sides of the narrow opening, only one-half of the throw is necessary as in the prior air curtains. Obviously, protective screens against childrens hands, or dirt may be provided.
While it is preferred that arms 7 (and vanes 14) be continuous throughout the entire height of the casing and only one roller be used for each arm, .if desired, rollers may be used at each end of the casing. Likewise, the arms may be split into an upper and lower half, if desired, with a roller bearing to guide each half of the arm. A bottom end plate with thrust bearing (not shown) is also provided.
The advantages of this invention may be summarized as follows:
(A) An air pump which in itself has a built-in duct and grilles, throughout the length of the unit.
(B) Hinged wings or sliding vanes in the centrifugal air pump have no friction against outer casing. An important feature is that a very close adjustment or tolerance can be made, and continuously maintained, between the edges of the wings and the casing, since there is no wear.
(C) Wings or vanes transfer the centrifugal forces to the end plates through bearings.
(D) Air pump rotor, and the slots for supply and return air are continuous throughout the entire length of the unit.
(E) An air curtain produced by supplying and returning the air through opposite sides of the opening.
(F) A combined air pattern to avoid losses of air conditioning, and dead zones in the air curtain.
(G) The inlet and outlet connections of the centrifugal air pump serve the dual purpose of supply and return slots for the air jet of the air curtain.
(H) Heating, cooling or air filter elements could easily be located in the suction side of the pump, without changing the size or shape.
(1) Minimum power required since static pressure equals 0.
Throughout the specification and claims, when ventilating occurs, it also includes air curtains for any type of opening including, but not limited to, industrial uses, such as, industrial heating ovens to retain the heat in the ovens, etc.
It is therefore seen that this invention has many new, useful and nnobvious featuresover the prior patents.
What is claimed is:
1. A method for forming an air curtain in an opening in a structure by provding a transverse, high velocity jet of air from one side of the opening to the other side, collecting in a casing a large volume of air through a relatively large opening extending uninterruptedly throughout substantially the entire height of the casing structure opening at the opposite side thereof, moving said large volume of air by an air pump inside the casing and having arms extending continuously throughout substantially the length of the casing, compressing the volume of air, and passing said compressed air at high jet velocity through a relatively narrow opening extending uninterruptedly throughout the entire height of the casing and structure opening toward said opposite side of the structure in a separate path spaced from, but substantially parallel to, a path taken by the incoming air to said relatively large opening.
2. A method for forming an air curtain in a doorway by providing a transverse, high velocity jet of air from one side of the doorway to the other side of the doorway, gradually increasing the velocity of the air after it has passed the midpoint therebetween by being affected by the intake suction at the opposite side, collecting a large volume of air through a relatively large uninterrupted opening extending substantially throughout the entire height of the doorway at the opposite side thereof, moving said large volume of air by an air pump adjacent the door casing, compressing the volume of air, and passing said compressed air at high jet velocity through a relatively narrow opening extending substantially throughout the entire height of the doorway toward the opposite side of the doorway in a separate path spaced from but adjacent to the path taken by the incoming air to said large opening.
3. An air curtain system comprising a vertically arranged casing on each side of a door opening, an elongated rotor within each said casing extending the length of the casing, and having outwardly extending vanes throughout its length to move air through said casing, said casing having a relatively wide intake opening extending the full length of said casing, and a relatively narrow outlet slot extending the full length of said casing on the other side of said casing and means to rotate said rotor whereby two separate anddistinct, spaced apart, curtains of air moving in opposite, substantially parallel directions will be provided'throughout the entire door opening.
4. A system a set forth in claim 3, wherein the said rotor is eccentrically mounted and will gather and compress the air so that a high velocity jet stream will be provided.
5. A system as set forth in claim 4 wherein said vanes are pivotally connected to said rotor and are thrown out by centrifugal force to such a point that they almost touch the sides of the casing.
6. A system as set forth in claim 5, and a header for said casing having a track, and roller bearings mounted on the upper ends of said arms and positioned in said track to prevent said arms from scraping the side of said casing and creating noises.
7. A system as set forth in claim 6, wherein a single motor drives the said rotors in said casings.
8. A vertical casing adapted to be positioned along the side of a doorway as set forth in claim 3, said elongated rotor being eccentrically mounted in said casing and having pivotally positioned around its circumference a series of continuous arms extending substantially throughout the entire length of said casing whereby two spaced apart, oppositely moving, paths of air will be provided.
9. A vertical casing adapted to be positioned along the side of a doorway comprising a large inlet opening and a small outlet opening as set forth in claim 3, said rotor being eccentrically mounted in said casing and having pivotally positioned around its circumference a series of elongated arms extending substantially throughout the entire length of said casing, a header for said casing positioned above said arms and having a circular track in the lower side thereof, a roller positioned above and at the outer edge of each of said arms and engaging said track, power to drive said rotor whereby the collecting arms will gather a large quantity of air entering through the inlet and will condense and propel it from the outlet, whereby a constant stream of air will proceed from said casing.
10. A device as set forth in claim 9, wherein an oilless bearing is positioned in said top header, and a thrust hearing is positioned in said bottom header.
11. An air curtain system comprising a vertically arranged casing on each side of a door opening, each of said casings having a relatively wide intake opening extending the full length of said casing, and a relatively narrow outlet slot extending the full length of said casing adjacent said intake opening, said wide intake opening in one casing being positioned opposite said narrow outlet opening in the other casing whereby two spaced apart, oppositely moving, curtains of air will be provided, a rotor in .said casing, air sweeping wings having an enlarged longitudinal edge thereof pivoted in sockets in said rotor, and rotatable bearings carried adjacent the opposite edge of said wings, and the space between said casing and said wings being finely adjusted and exceedingly narrow since no wear occurs on the edges of the wings or the casing.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 862,162 8/1907 Honig 10314O 1,095,499 5/1914 Gillespie 98-36 X 2,604,853 7/1952 Taylor 103-140 X 2,616,615 11/1952 Scott 103-117 3,080,824 3/1963 Boyd et al. 103-117 3,282,193 1/1967 Jennings 9836 FOREIGN PATENTS 253,478 8/ 1964 Australia. 677,674 8/ 1952 England.
ROBERT A. OLEARY, Primary Examiner.
MEYER PERLIN, Examiner.
W. E. WAYNER, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. A METHOD FOR FORMING AN AIR CURTAIN IN AN OPENING IN A STRUCTURE BY PROVIDING A TRANSVERSE, HIGH VELOCITY JET OF AIR FROM ONE SIDE OF THE OPENING TO THE OTHER SIDE, COLLECTING IN A CASING A LARGE VOLUME OF SAID THROUGH A RELATIVELY LARGE OPENING EXTENDING UNINTERRUPTEDLY THROUGHOUT SUBSTANTIALLY THE ENTIRE HEIGHT OF THE CASING STRUCTURE OPENING AT THE OPPOSITE SIDE THEREOF, MOVING SAID LARGE VOLUME OF AIR BY AN AIR PUMP INSIDE THE CASING AND HAVING ARMS EXTENDING CONTINUOUSLY THROUGHOUT SUBSTANTIALLY THE LENGTH OF THE CASING, COMPRESSING THE VOLUME OF AIR, AND PASSING SAID COMPRESSED AIR AT HIGH JET VELOCITY THROUGH A RELATIVELY NARROW OPENING EXTENDING INTERRUPTEDLY THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE HEIGHT OF THE CASING AND STRUCTURE OPENING TOWARD SAID OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE STRUCTURE IN A SEPARATE PATH SPACED FROM, BUT SUBSTANTIALLY PARALLEL TO, A PATH TAKEN BY THE INCOMING AIR TO SAID RELATIVELY LARGE OPENING.
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Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3859900A (en) * 1972-02-11 1975-01-14 Marc Fordsmand Air curtain system
US4051893A (en) * 1975-07-25 1977-10-04 Raul Guibert Air curtain-projecting ventilator
US4114521A (en) * 1976-07-19 1978-09-19 Caswell Equipment Co. Ventilation method and system for protecting shooters from pollutants
US4291668A (en) * 1979-03-05 1981-09-29 Moeller Erwin W Griddle ventilating system
DE3806234A1 (en) * 1988-02-27 1989-09-07 Robert Falk Sliding-door arrangement with hot-air curtain device
US5195888A (en) * 1991-08-19 1993-03-23 Praxair Technology, Inc. Multi-layer fluid curtains for furnace openings
US6210267B1 (en) 1998-02-27 2001-04-03 Gaming Edge Products, L.L.C. Apparatus and method for use of an air rail
DE10005964A1 (en) * 2000-02-09 2001-08-23 Kessler & Luch Gmbh & Co Kg Draft air entry prevention device for aperture in building has fan or compressed air device spaced out by air gap from building
DE10019018A1 (en) * 2000-04-17 2001-10-25 Max Eckert Insect barrier with surface of high pressure air flowing through nozzles and slots
WO2001081835A1 (en) 2000-04-14 2001-11-01 Robert Falk Air curtain device with an air circuit
WO2003033968A1 (en) * 2001-10-17 2003-04-24 Robert Falk Door device comprising at least one door
WO2003033852A1 (en) * 2001-10-17 2003-04-24 Robert Falk Front glazing
US20030129939A1 (en) * 2002-01-09 2003-07-10 Christian Israel Arrangement for producing an air partition
EP1342959A1 (en) * 2002-03-04 2003-09-10 LWT Luftwandtechnologie GmbH Device for shielding an opening in a refuse processing plant
US20040003617A1 (en) * 2002-05-17 2004-01-08 Chandler Michael S. Device and method for creating a horizontal air curtain for a cooler
US20040233458A1 (en) * 2000-11-28 2004-11-25 Rosemount, Inc. Electromagnetic resonant sensor
US20040242146A1 (en) * 2001-10-17 2004-12-02 Robert Falk Sliding door device
US20060160484A1 (en) * 2003-07-11 2006-07-20 Robert Falk Door with integrated identification system in the air curtain device
WO2007003176A1 (en) 2005-07-04 2007-01-11 Robert Falk Door system
WO2007144965A1 (en) 2006-06-13 2007-12-21 Fugaku Bussan Co., Ltd. External device controller, information management system, and its program
WO2008040266A3 (en) * 2006-06-27 2008-06-26 Robert Falk Apparatus for air-conditioning and/or monitoring building zones
US8287337B2 (en) 2006-01-11 2012-10-16 Hcr Incorporated Cold storage doorway with airflow control system and method
US8376822B1 (en) 2007-01-04 2013-02-19 Peter R. Smith Air curtain arrangement for a cold storage doorway with dynamic airflow-directing system and method
ES2457723A1 (en) * 2012-10-26 2014-04-28 Universidad De Extremadura Door frame with air barrier for biological containment, and procedure associated with it (Machine-translation by Google Translate, not legally binding)
EP2746686A1 (en) * 2012-12-24 2014-06-25 Handelsmaatschappij Willy Deweerdt Bvba Device for generating an air wall
US11207630B2 (en) * 2020-04-25 2021-12-28 Aerocontain Technologies Inc. Aerosol protection system
US20220349598A1 (en) * 2019-04-30 2022-11-03 Wirth Doors Limited An active airflow inhibiting apparatus

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US2604853A (en) * 1946-08-02 1952-07-29 Taylor Francis William Rotary fluid pump or motor
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US3282193A (en) * 1963-04-19 1966-11-01 Minikay Ltd Air curtains

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US862162A (en) * 1906-08-23 1907-08-06 Arthur Honig Rotary machine.
US1095499A (en) * 1913-07-30 1914-05-05 Charles B Gillespie Means for excluding flies from buildings.
US2604853A (en) * 1946-08-02 1952-07-29 Taylor Francis William Rotary fluid pump or motor
GB677674A (en) * 1949-06-17 1952-08-20 Edgard Jacques Bourquin Improvements in rotary pumps or engines
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Cited By (35)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3859900A (en) * 1972-02-11 1975-01-14 Marc Fordsmand Air curtain system
US4051893A (en) * 1975-07-25 1977-10-04 Raul Guibert Air curtain-projecting ventilator
US4114521A (en) * 1976-07-19 1978-09-19 Caswell Equipment Co. Ventilation method and system for protecting shooters from pollutants
US4291668A (en) * 1979-03-05 1981-09-29 Moeller Erwin W Griddle ventilating system
DE3806234A1 (en) * 1988-02-27 1989-09-07 Robert Falk Sliding-door arrangement with hot-air curtain device
US5195888A (en) * 1991-08-19 1993-03-23 Praxair Technology, Inc. Multi-layer fluid curtains for furnace openings
US5336085A (en) * 1991-08-19 1994-08-09 Praxair Technology, Inc. Multi-layer fluid curtains for furnace openings
US6210267B1 (en) 1998-02-27 2001-04-03 Gaming Edge Products, L.L.C. Apparatus and method for use of an air rail
DE10005964C2 (en) * 2000-02-09 2001-12-13 Kessler & Luch Gmbh & Co Kg Device for preventing drafts from entering through an opening in a building
DE10005964A1 (en) * 2000-02-09 2001-08-23 Kessler & Luch Gmbh & Co Kg Draft air entry prevention device for aperture in building has fan or compressed air device spaced out by air gap from building
WO2001081835A1 (en) 2000-04-14 2001-11-01 Robert Falk Air curtain device with an air circuit
DE10019018A1 (en) * 2000-04-17 2001-10-25 Max Eckert Insect barrier with surface of high pressure air flowing through nozzles and slots
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