Gas mixer
First Claim
1. A gas mixer for mixing two or more separate streams of gases at least one of which may be variable in respect of the quantity of gas conveyed and the characteristics thereof, comprising a chamber having boundary walls defining a passage for gas flowing therethrough and a flow axis, a fluid exit at one end of said chamber and fluid entries at the opposite end of said chamber with respect to said passage, said fluid entries comprising groups of ducts arranged to discharge into one or more planes normal to said axis, the ducts in the same plane being arranged in pairs such that the members of each pair are opposed, there being a damper in respect of each duct arranged at the boundary between the chamber and the respective duct, said dampers comprising one or more pivoted vanes the pivotal axes of which are substantially parallel to the direction of flow through the chamber, and any unpaired gas stream is fed into one or more ducts passing into the chamber in a parallel but different plane to the plane or planes containing the paired ducts, said ducts being apertured in such positions so as to enable the unpaired gas stream to enter the gas passing through the chamber along the said flow axis substantially normal to the main flow of gas from the paired ducts.
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Accused Products
Abstract
A gas mixer for mixing two or more gases of different quantities and physical characteristics includes a gas inlet chamber and a gas mixing chamber in gaseous communication with the gas inlet chamber. Pairs of gas inlet ducts face one another across the gas inlet chamber so that the gas streams emitting from the inlet ducts interfere causing intermingling of the gases. From the inlet chamber the gases flow downwardly into a mixing chamber. A clean air inlet duct extends across the mixing chamber. The clean air inlet duct has a longitudinal slot with a cusp shaped baffle disposed in the slot. Clean air exits the clean air inlet duct through the slot past the baffle and into the gas mixing chamber where it mixes with the gases from the inlet chamber. The mixture of gas then flows out of the mixing chamber, past rectifying vanes which change the gas flow from turbulent to laminar, and into an exhaust duct.
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Citations
3 Claims
- 1. A gas mixer for mixing two or more separate streams of gases at least one of which may be variable in respect of the quantity of gas conveyed and the characteristics thereof, comprising a chamber having boundary walls defining a passage for gas flowing therethrough and a flow axis, a fluid exit at one end of said chamber and fluid entries at the opposite end of said chamber with respect to said passage, said fluid entries comprising groups of ducts arranged to discharge into one or more planes normal to said axis, the ducts in the same plane being arranged in pairs such that the members of each pair are opposed, there being a damper in respect of each duct arranged at the boundary between the chamber and the respective duct, said dampers comprising one or more pivoted vanes the pivotal axes of which are substantially parallel to the direction of flow through the chamber, and any unpaired gas stream is fed into one or more ducts passing into the chamber in a parallel but different plane to the plane or planes containing the paired ducts, said ducts being apertured in such positions so as to enable the unpaired gas stream to enter the gas passing through the chamber along the said flow axis substantially normal to the main flow of gas from the paired ducts.
Specification