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吸尘器设计外文.docx

1、 The vacuum cleaner technology and history Vacuum cleaner - classification Vacuum cleaner species more, according to the structure points are mainly: 1, vertical:a bucket or square round the majority,points on, under two parts,the upper part. is powered with motor,the lower for dust collectio

2、n box. 2, horizontal: rectangular or models shape,have two parts,front before for dust collection box,rear part for the motor. 3 and portable,it usually has four kinds of form - shoulder type:smaller,when using back on his shoulders,smaller power;Pole type: shape like rod,handles,and on the top i

3、s for suction nozzle below,smaller power;Portable:smaller,which can be directly used in hand grip, smaller power;Mini type:multi-purpose battery-powered,smaller,more for clean clothes, instruments,smaller power. According to the drive motors to points vacuum cleaner and can be divided into the fol

4、lowing categories: ac vacuum cleaners, dc cleaner and ac/dc amphibious vacuum cleaner. Vacuum cleaner - working principle Cleaner mainly by up dust,vacuuming,blow 3 parts,generally includes string-excited motor, centrifugal blower KSF, blow device (bags) and vacuuming accessories. KSF string-exci

5、ted motor speed up more than 20000r/min (mini vacuum cleaner analyzed.combined by micro,rated voltage dc machines for 3 ~ 6V). Blow is usually adopts mesh, flannelette or filter materials. General cleaner power for 400 ~ 1000W or higher,portable vacuum cleaner power generally lower than 250W.Cleaner

6、 principle of work is as follows: motor high-speed drive their impeller rotation, make air high-speed eduction, and the air blower front-end vacuuming cottrell constantly supply,make aspiration to fan cottrell,thus produced with outside the instantaneous vacuum forming negative pressure differential

7、 pressure,on the pressure difference,under the action of inhaled air,the dust scurf,ejecting purity is filtered air cleaner air.The greater the air pressure difference,the greater the greater ability,aspiration. A vacuum cleaner,commonly referred to as a vacuum is a device that uses an air pump to

8、create a partial vacuum to suck up dust and dirt, usually from floors. The dirt is collected by either a dust bag or a cyclone for later disposal. Vacuum cleaners, which are used in homes as well an in industry, exist in a variety of sizes and models: from small battery-operated hand-held devices to

9、 huge stationary industrial appliances that can handle several hundred litters of dust before being emptied. Technology A vacuum's suction is caused by a difference in air pressure. An electric fan reduces the pressure inside the machine. Atmospheric pressure then pushes the air through the carpet

10、 and into the nozzle, and so the dust is literally pushed into the bag. Tests have shown that vacuuming can kill 100% of young fleas and 96% of adult fleas. A British inventor has developed a new cleaning technology known as Air Recycling Technology which instead of using a vacuum uses an air stre

11、am to collect dust from the carpet. This technology was tested by the Market Transformation Programmer (MTP) and shown to be more energy efficient than the vacuum method. Although working prototypes exist Air Recycling Technology is not currently used in any production cleaner. Exhaust filtration

12、Vacuums by their nature cause dust to become airborne, by exhausting air that is not completely filtered. This can cause health problems since the operator ends up inhaling this dust. There are several methods manufacturers are using to solve this problem. Some methods may be combined together in a

13、single vacuum. Typically the filter is positioned so that the incoming air passes through it before it reaches the motor. Typically, the filtered air then passes through the motor for cooling purposes. History The vacuum cleaner evolved from the carpet sweeper via manual vacuum cleaners. The first

14、 manual models, using bellows, came in the 1869s, and first motorised models came in the beginning of the 20th century. Daniel Hess Daniel Hess of West Union, Lowe, USA invented a vacuum cleaner in 1860.Calling it a carpet sweeper instead of a vacuum cleaner, his machine did, in fact, have a rot

15、ating brush like a traditional vacuum cleaner, which also possessed an elaborate bellows mechanism on top of the body to generate suction of dust and dirt. Hess received a patent (U.S.No.29.077) for his invention of the vacuum cleaner on July 10, 1860. Elves W. Mc Gaffe The first manually-powered

16、cleaner using vacuum principles was the “Whirlwind,” invented in Chicago, USA in 1868 by elves W. Mc Gaffe The machine was lightweight and compact, but was difficult to operate because of the need to turn a hand crank at the same time as pushing it across the floor. Mc Gaffe enlisted the help of The

17、 American Carpet Cleaning Co. of Boston to market it to the pubic. It was sold for $25. It is hard to determine how successful the Whirlwind was, as most of them were sold in Chicago and Boston, and it is likely that many were lost in the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. Only two are known to have surviv

18、ed, one of which can be found in the Hoover Historical Center. Mc Gaffney was but one of many 19th-century inventors in the United States and Europe who devised manual vacuum cleaners. He obtained a patent (U.S.No.91,145) on June 8,1869. Melville Bissell In 1876, Melville Bissell of Grand Rap

19、ids, Michigan, USA created a vacuum cleaner for his wife, Anna, to clean up sawdust in carpeting. Shortly after, Bissell Carpet Sweepers were born. After Melville died unexpectedly in 1889, Anna took control of the company and was one of the most powerful businesswomen of the day. John S. Thurman

20、On November 14,1898, John S. Thurman of St. Louis, Missouri, USA. Submitted for patent (U.S.No.634,042)a “pneumatic carpet renovator”. It was issued on October3, 1899. Thurman created a gasoline powered carpet cleaner for the General Compressed Air Company. In a newspaper advertisement from the St.

21、Louis Dispatch, Thurman offered his invention of the horse drawn (which went door to door) motorized cleaning system in St. Louis. Louis. He offered cleaning services at $4 per visit. By 1906, Thurman was offering built-in central cleaning systems that used compressed air, yet featured n dust collec

22、tion. Thurman’s machine is sometimes considered the first vacuum cleaner. However, the dust was blown into a receptacle rather than being sucked in, an in the machine now used. In later patent litigation, Judge Augustus Hand ruled that Thurman “does not appear to have attempted to design a vacuum cl

23、eaner or to have understood the process of vacuum cleaning.” H. Cecil Booth Hubert Cecil Booth has the strongest claim to inventing the motorized vacuum cleaner in 1901. As Booth recalled decades later, in 1901 he attended “a demonstration of an American machine by its inventor” at the Empire Musi

24、c Hall in London. The inventor is not named, but Booth’s description of the machine conforms fairly closely to Thurman’s design, as modified in later patents. Booth watched a demonstration of the device which blew dust off the chairs, and thought it would be much more useful to have one that sucked

25、dust. He tested the idea by laying a handkerchief on the seat of a restaurant chair, putting his mouth to the handkerchief, and then trying to suck up as much dust as he could onto the handkerchief. Upon seeing the dust and dirt collected on the underside of the handkerchief he realized the idea cou

26、ld work. Booth created a large device, driven first by an oil engine, and later by an electric motor electric. Nicknamed the "Puffing Billy", Booth's petrol-powered, horse-drawn vacuum cleaner relied upon air drawn through a cloth filter. Gaining the royal seal of approval, Booth's motorized vacuum

27、 cleaner was used to clean the carpets of Westminster Abbey prior to Edward VII’s coronation in 1901. Booth received his first patents on February 18 and August 30, 1901 David T. Kenney Nine patents granted to the New Jersey, USA inventor David T. Kenney between 1903 and 1913 established the found

28、ation for the American vacuum cleaner industry. Membership in the Vacuum Cleaner Manufacturers’ Associatio, formed in 1919, was limited to licensees under his patents. Walter Griffiths In 1905 "Griffith's Improved Vacuum Apparatus for Removing Dust from Carpets" was another manually operated clean

29、er, patented by Walter Griffiths Manufacturer, Birmingham, England. was portable, easy to store, and powered by "any one person (such as the ordinary domestic servant he task of compressing a bellows-like contraption to suck up dust through a removable, flexible pipe, to which a variety of shaped n

30、ozzles could be attached. This was arguably the first domestic vacuum-cleaning device to resemble the modern vacuum cleaner. Hermann Bogenschild German immigrant engineer Hermann Bogenschild filed a patent in 1906 for a mechanical 'dust removing apparatus.' Emigrating from Berlin to Milwaukee in 1

31、892, Bogenschild's device was mounted on wheels for portability and its motor was connected to a hose and filter system. James Murray Spangler In 1907, James Murray Spangler, a janitor Canton, Ohio, practical, portable vacuum cleaner. Crucially, in addition to suction that used an electric fan, a

32、box, and one of his wife's pillowcases, Spangler's design incorporated a rotating brush to loosen debris. Unable to produce the design himself due to lack of funding, he sold the patent in 1908 to William Henry Hoover who had Spangler's machine redesigned with a steel casing, casters, and attachment

33、s. Subsequent innovations included the first disposal filter bags in the 1920s and the first upright vacuum cleaner in 1926. Hoover Spangler patented his rotating-brush design June 2, 1908, and eventually sold the idea to his cousin's husband, Hoover. He was looking for a new product to sell, as t

34、he leather goods produced by his 'Hoover Harness and Leather Goods' company were becoming obsolete, because of the invention of the automobile. In the United States, Hoover remains one of the leading manufacturers of household goods, including vacuum cleaners; and Hoover became very wealthy from the

35、 invention. Indeed, in Britain the name Hoover became synonymous with the vacuum cleaner so much so that one "hovers one's carpets". Initially called 'The Electric Suction Sweeper Company', their first vacuum was the 1908 Model O, which sold for $60. Nilfisk In 1910, P.A. Frisker patented a vacuum

36、 cleaner using a name based on the company’s telegram address—Nilfisk. It was the first electric vacuum cleaner in Europe. His design weighed just 17.5 kg and could be operated by a single person. The company Frisker and Nielsen was formed just a few years before. Today the Nilfisk vacuums are deliv

37、ered by Nilfisk-Advance. Electrolux Model V The first vacuum cleaners were bulky stand-up units and not easily portable. But in 1921 Electrolux launched the Model V that was designed to lie on the floor on two thin metal runners. This innovation, conceived by Electrolux founder Axel Wenner-Gren, b

38、ecame a standard feature on generations of future vacuum cleaners. There is a recorded example of a 1930s Electrolux vacuum cleaner surviving in use for over 70 years, finally breaking in 2008. Post-World War II For many years after their introduction, vacuum cleaners remained a luxury item; but

39、after World War II they became common among the middle classes. They tend to be more common in Western countries because, in most parts of the world, wall-to-wall carpeting is uncommon and homes have tile or hardwood floors, which are easily swept, wiped, or mopped. Vacuum cleaners working on the c

40、yclone principle became popular in the 1990s, although some companies (notably Filter Queen and Regina) have been making vacuum cleaners with cyclonic action since 1928. Modern cyclonic cleaners were adapted from industrial cyclonic separators by British designer James Dyson in 1985. He launched his

41、 cyclone cleaner first in Japan in the 1980s at a cost of about US$1,800 and later the Dyson DC01 upright in the UK in 1993 for £200. It was expected that people would not buy a vacuum cleaner at twice the price of a normal cleaner, but it later became the most popular cleaner in the UK. Cyclonic c

42、leaners do not use bags instead; the dust collects in a detachable, cylindrical collection vessel. Air and dust are blown at high speed into the collection vessel at a direction tangential to the vessel wall, creating a vortex. The dust particles and other debris move to the outside of the vessel by

43、 centrifugal force, where they fall due to gravity, and clean air from the center of the vortex is expelled from the machine after passing through a number of successively finer filters at the top of the container. The first filter is intended to trap particles which could damage the subsequent filt

44、ers that remove fine dust particles. The filters must regularly be cleaned or replaced to ensure that the machine continues to perform efficiently. Since Dyson, several other companies have introduced cyclone models, including Hoover, Bissell, Eureka, Electrolux, etc and the cheapest models are no m

45、ore expensive than a conventional cleaner. In early 2000 several companies developed robotic vacuum cleaners. Some examples are Roman, Robomaxx, Intellibot, Trilobite and Floor Bot. These machines propel themselves in patterns across a floor, cleaning surface dust and debris into their dustbin. The

46、y usually can navigate around furniture and find their recharging stations. Most robotic vacuum cleaners are designed for home use, although there are more capable models for operation in offices, hotels, hospitals, etc. Some such as the Roman are equipped with an impeller motor to create an actual

47、vacuum. By the end of 2003 about 570,000 units were sold worldwide. In 2004 a British company released Airider, a hovering vacuum cleaner that floats on a cushion of air. It has claimed to be light weight and easier to maneuver (compared to using wheels), although it is not the first vacuum cleaner to do this—the Hoover Constellation predated it by at least 35 years.

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