US20220168770A1 - Flameless energized emanator - Google Patents
Flameless energized emanator Download PDFInfo
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- US20220168770A1 US20220168770A1 US17/353,742 US202117353742A US2022168770A1 US 20220168770 A1 US20220168770 A1 US 20220168770A1 US 202117353742 A US202117353742 A US 202117353742A US 2022168770 A1 US2022168770 A1 US 2022168770A1
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- United States
- Prior art keywords
- emanator
- heat source
- heat
- treatment agent
- housing
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A01—AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
- A01M—CATCHING, TRAPPING OR SCARING OF ANIMALS; APPARATUS FOR THE DESTRUCTION OF NOXIOUS ANIMALS OR NOXIOUS PLANTS
- A01M1/00—Stationary means for catching or killing insects
- A01M1/20—Poisoning, narcotising, or burning insects
- A01M1/2022—Poisoning or narcotising insects by vaporising an insecticide
- A01M1/2061—Poisoning or narcotising insects by vaporising an insecticide using a heat source
- A01M1/2077—Poisoning or narcotising insects by vaporising an insecticide using a heat source using an electrical resistance as heat source
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B05—SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
- B05B—SPRAYING APPARATUS; ATOMISING APPARATUS; NOZZLES
- B05B17/00—Apparatus for spraying or atomising liquids or other fluent materials, not covered by the preceding groups
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A01—AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
- A01M—CATCHING, TRAPPING OR SCARING OF ANIMALS; APPARATUS FOR THE DESTRUCTION OF NOXIOUS ANIMALS OR NOXIOUS PLANTS
- A01M1/00—Stationary means for catching or killing insects
- A01M1/20—Poisoning, narcotising, or burning insects
- A01M1/2022—Poisoning or narcotising insects by vaporising an insecticide
- A01M1/2061—Poisoning or narcotising insects by vaporising an insecticide using a heat source
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A01—AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
- A01N—PRESERVATION OF BODIES OF HUMANS OR ANIMALS OR PLANTS OR PARTS THEREOF; BIOCIDES, e.g. AS DISINFECTANTS, AS PESTICIDES OR AS HERBICIDES; PEST REPELLANTS OR ATTRACTANTS; PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS
- A01N25/00—Biocides, pest repellants or attractants, or plant growth regulators, characterised by their forms, or by their non-active ingredients or by their methods of application, e.g. seed treatment or sequential application; Substances for reducing the noxious effect of the active ingredients to organisms other than pests
- A01N25/18—Vapour or smoke emitting compositions with delayed or sustained release
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A01—AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
- A01N—PRESERVATION OF BODIES OF HUMANS OR ANIMALS OR PLANTS OR PARTS THEREOF; BIOCIDES, e.g. AS DISINFECTANTS, AS PESTICIDES OR AS HERBICIDES; PEST REPELLANTS OR ATTRACTANTS; PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS
- A01N25/00—Biocides, pest repellants or attractants, or plant growth regulators, characterised by their forms, or by their non-active ingredients or by their methods of application, e.g. seed treatment or sequential application; Substances for reducing the noxious effect of the active ingredients to organisms other than pests
- A01N25/20—Combustible or heat-generating compositions
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A01—AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
- A01P—BIOCIDAL, PEST REPELLANT, PEST ATTRACTANT OR PLANT GROWTH REGULATORY ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR PREPARATIONS
- A01P7/00—Arthropodicides
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61L—METHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
- A61L9/00—Disinfection, sterilisation or deodorisation of air
- A61L9/01—Deodorant compositions
- A61L9/012—Deodorant compositions characterised by being in a special form, e.g. gels, emulsions
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61L—METHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
- A61L9/00—Disinfection, sterilisation or deodorisation of air
- A61L9/01—Deodorant compositions
- A61L9/013—Deodorant compositions containing animal or plant extracts, or vegetable material
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61L—METHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
- A61L9/00—Disinfection, sterilisation or deodorisation of air
- A61L9/015—Disinfection, sterilisation or deodorisation of air using gaseous or vaporous substances, e.g. ozone
- A61L9/02—Disinfection, sterilisation or deodorisation of air using gaseous or vaporous substances, e.g. ozone using substances evaporated in the air by heating or combustion
- A61L9/03—Apparatus therefor
- A61L9/037—Apparatus therefor comprising a wick
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M11/00—Sprayers or atomisers specially adapted for therapeutic purposes
- A61M11/04—Sprayers or atomisers specially adapted for therapeutic purposes operated by the vapour pressure of the liquid to be sprayed or atomised
- A61M11/041—Sprayers or atomisers specially adapted for therapeutic purposes operated by the vapour pressure of the liquid to be sprayed or atomised using heaters
- A61M11/047—Sprayers or atomisers specially adapted for therapeutic purposes operated by the vapour pressure of the liquid to be sprayed or atomised using heaters by exothermic chemical reaction
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B05—SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
- B05B—SPRAYING APPARATUS; ATOMISING APPARATUS; NOZZLES
- B05B11/00—Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use
- B05B11/0002—Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use incorporating means for heating or cooling, e.g. the material to be sprayed
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61L—METHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
- A61L2209/00—Aspects relating to disinfection, sterilisation or deodorisation of air
- A61L2209/10—Apparatus features
- A61L2209/11—Apparatus for controlling air treatment
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61L—METHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
- A61L2209/00—Aspects relating to disinfection, sterilisation or deodorisation of air
- A61L2209/10—Apparatus features
- A61L2209/13—Dispensing or storing means for active compounds
- A61L2209/131—Semi-permeable membranes
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61L—METHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
- A61L2209/00—Aspects relating to disinfection, sterilisation or deodorisation of air
- A61L2209/10—Apparatus features
- A61L2209/13—Dispensing or storing means for active compounds
- A61L2209/133—Replaceable cartridges, refills
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M2205/00—General characteristics of the apparatus
- A61M2205/36—General characteristics of the apparatus related to heating or cooling
- A61M2205/362—General characteristics of the apparatus related to heating or cooling by gas flow
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M2205/00—General characteristics of the apparatus
- A61M2205/82—Internal energy supply devices
- A61M2205/8206—Internal energy supply devices battery-operated
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M2205/00—General characteristics of the apparatus
- A61M2205/82—Internal energy supply devices
- A61M2205/8293—Solar
Definitions
- This invention relates to devices configured to dispense a treatment agent in vapor phase into a local environment and at an enhanced rate compared to surface evaporation from a quantity of the treatment agent in liquid phase at room temperature in undisturbed air.
- One way to treat a local environment is to simply spray aerosol scent or mosquito repellant into the air.
- Devices such as perfumed or scented candles are available to create a pleasing smell in a local environment.
- Citronella candles are commercially available for insect abatement, and may be burned when treatment of a local area is desired.
- various machines may be employed to burn propane and emit a fog of repellant or poison. Some machines attract mosquitos and employ suction to capture them in a bag. Other devices attract insects, and kill them with a spark of electricity.
- These currently available products either lack sufficient efficacy, are cumbersome to use, or are too costly to gain wide acceptance. It would be an improvement to provide an effective product that is simple to use and sufficiently low cost to permit its disposal after a single use.
- Embodiments typically includes an emanator element, a treatment agent associated with the emanator, and an energizing source to enhance emanation of the treatment agent in vapor phase.
- An emanator element typically has a surface area disposed in operable association with a volume in which to hold a quantity of treatment agent.
- a preferred emanator has a vapor-emitting surface area in excess of about 1000 mm 2 .
- Treatment agent volatizes, sublimates, or evaporates from the surface area to broadcast treatment agent in vapor phase.
- a workable emanator element may include a material selected from cotton, paper, cellulose, woven or nonwoven textile or random mat or sheet or 3-dimensional structure comprising natural or synthetic fibers, natural or synthetic open or closed cell sponge, high surface area (HSA) materials having a surface area greater than 10 m 2 /gm, diffusion membrane, porous metal, metallized fabric, and the like.
- HSA high surface area
- the flameless energizing source may be disposed in a variety of operable configurations with the volume to apply heat energy to the treatment agent therein.
- Certain embodiments may include a treatment agent-holding volume that is directly bounded in part or in whole by the surface area.
- a flameless heat source may be partially or fully surrounded by the volume to dispose the volume between the heat source and the evaporating surface area.
- the entire quantity of treatment agent contained in an assembly is disposed to simultaneously receive heat from the heat source.
- a workable embodiment may include an agent storage volume that is configured to receive energizing input on a portion of its volume-defining boundary area.
- the volume-defining boundary area may include the vapor-discharging surface area.
- certain embodiments may include a bulk storage volume from which a wicking element draws treatment agent for evaporation of the treatment agent from a surface area of the wick. Other operable arrangements will occur to one of ordinary skill.
- a workable treatment agent may be selected from scented oil, medicament, and insect repellant or insecticide.
- treatment agent may be in fluid phase.
- the treatment agent may be provided in a solidified form to resist spills and mess.
- treatment agent fluid may be uptaken by a high surface area material from which treatment agent vapor may be released.
- the treatment agent may be provided in solid phase at room temperature. Heat energy may be applied to a treatment agent that is in liquid phase, solid phase, or solidified form to enhance broadcast of treatment agent in vapor phase to a local environment.
- the assembly includes a housing configured to contain the emanator and the heat source.
- An exemplary housing includes a plurality of apertures to permit migration of treatment agent in vapor state from the surface area to a local environment.
- a housing can be configured to define a safety perimeter.
- a housing may be configured to resist contact of the emanator with a child's tongue or fingers.
- a housing may sometimes be configured to resist user contact with a heated portion.
- a preferred housing includes a base configured to support the energized assembly on top of a surface under the influence of gravity.
- Certain housings may include an upstanding wall to hold apertures through which vapor may pass to the local environment.
- One housing may also include a cap to cover a volume defined inside the housing.
- the housing and cap may be configured to cooperate upon assembly of the emanating assembly to resist nondestructive disassembly and unauthorized access to the emanator element.
- the housing can include a hook configured to support the assembly from a cooperating perch.
- a workable heat source may include one or more of: chemicals arranged to generate an on-demand exothermic reaction; structure or mechanism configured to absorb solar radiation (e.g., CuO coating); and an electrical circuit comprising a dry or wet cell battery disposed in a heat-generating configuration to generate heat within the battery.
- a workable heat source may include one or more commercially available battery from AAA to D cell size, or larger.
- Certain embodiments may include a removable gas barrier arranged to resist initiation of an exothermic chemical reaction associated with the energizing heat source.
- Embodiments may include a time-delay mechanism to delay activation of the heat source until after a period of time subsequent to first deployment of the assembly to treat a local environment.
- An embodiment may include a heat conducting element disposed between the heat source and the volume to facilitate heat transfer from the energizing heat source toward the volume. Sometimes, the heat conducting element may also operate to resist migration of treatment agent toward the heat source.
- One workable heat conducting element is metallic foil.
- Embodiments may optionally include a termination mechanism configured to resist further emanation of treatment agent in vapor state from the assembly to permit reuse of the apparatus at a subsequent time.
- an embodiment may include a trigger mechanism configured to initiate an exothermic reaction associated with the heat source.
- Embodiments may include a safety mechanism to resist undesired operation of the trigger mechanism.
- Embodiments may include an alternative safety mechanism to resist user access to a harmful component of the assembly.
- An exemplary safety mechanism to resist unauthorized access includes closely spaced apart louvers disposed around a perimeter of a tamper-proof housing.
- One preferred embodiment includes an emanator element configured as a shell of revolution about an open core, a volume of the shell to hold a treatment agent, the open core to hold a flameless heat source.
- a quantity of the treatment agent can conveniently be disposed in the shell's volume. Treatment agent may sometimes be stored in the volume as a solid or solidified fluid.
- the currently preferred embodiment includes a heat source disposed in the open core, the heat source comprising an exothermic mixture of chemicals arranged for on-demand production of heat.
- a heat conducting element is disposed between the chemicals and the emanator element to facilitate an even temperature profile applied to the treatment agent.
- the preferred embodiment also includes a housing with a plurality of spaced apart rails to provide a plurality of discharge apertures for a vapor of the treatment agent, the housing being configured to resist disassembly and unauthorized access to the emanator element. Further, an air-tight packaging envelope is disposed to resist combination of oxygen from a local atmosphere with the exothermic chemicals.
- An exemplary and substantially fully loaded embodiment includes an emanator element defining a volume in which to hold a treatment agent.
- Treatment agent can be a fluid.
- a quantity of the treatment agent is disposed in solidized form within the volume.
- a flameless heat source is disposed in operable association with the emanator, the heat source including an exothermic mixture of chemicals arranged for on-demand production of heat.
- a heat conducting element is disposed between the chemicals and the emanator element to promote application by the heat source of a uniform temperature profile onto the emanator.
- a housing is included to hold the emanator element in operable association with the heat source.
- the housing of this fully loaded embodiment also includes a plurality of discharge pores or apertures for a vapor of the treatment agent, and can also be configured to resist disassembly and unauthorized access to the emanator element.
- a trigger mechanism may be provided to cause the heat source to generate heat on-demand.
- a safety mechanism can also be provided to resist undesired operation of the trigger mechanism.
- a gas generating element may be disposed to enhance flow of treatment agent in vapor phase from the apertures.
- a termination mechanism may be provided to interrupt generation of heat by the heat source to permit reuse of the apparatus at a subsequent time.
- a sequestering arrangement holds a first ingredient out of contact with a second ingredient prior to actuation of the trigger mechanism.
- the assembly is typically packaged inside an air-tight packaging envelope to resist combination of oxygen from a local atmosphere with the exothermic chemicals prior to placement in service to treat a local environment.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic view of an exemplary device structured according to certain principles of the invention
- FIGS. 2 through 22 are schematic views in elevation of alternative embodiments within the ambit of FIG. 1 ;
- FIG. 23 is an exploded assembly view in perspective of a currently preferred embodiment within the ambit of FIG. 1 ;
- FIG. 24 is an exploded assembly view in perspective of another currently preferred embodiment within the ambit of FIG. 1 ;
- FIG. 25 is a schematic view in elevation of another currently preferred embodiment within the ambit of FIG. 1 .
- Embodiments 100 are typically self-contained, and desirably are portable to permit a person to easily move the assembly 100 to a desired location for operation to treat a local environment.
- Energized emanator assemblies 100 are conventionally used to apply a treatment fluid in vapor form to a local atmospheric environment. Treatment fluids may sometimes have relatively low volatility, and consequently, emanation of a vapor from those or other fluids may be enhanced to an efficacious degree by the energizing portion of an emanator assembly 100 .
- Embodiments 100 may be used, for nonexclusive examples, to treat a local atmosphere with a pleasing scent, beneficial treatment agent, or insect repellant.
- a local atmosphere may be stationary (e.g., due to an embodiment sitting on a table), or mobile (e.g., a user may wear an embodiment). Examples may be discussed below with reference to a particular fluid, such as insect repellant, but no limitation to any particular fluid is intended.
- Certain embodiments may be disposable after a single-use. Other embodiments may be recharged, or regenerated, to operate a plurality of times in succession.
- An emanator assembly 100 according to certain principles of the invention may operate for a period of several hours, one or more days, weeks, months, or even longer.
- One preferred emanator assembly 100 may be constructed to operate for a period of between about four and eight hours, and then be discarded. It is within contemplation that part or all of an emanator assembly 100 may be structured to facilitate its biodegradability.
- An assembly 100 includes an emanator 110 , a quantity of treatment fluid 120 , and a flameless heat source 130 or other mechanism to energize the assembly and cause enhanced emanation of a treatment substance.
- An exemplary heat source 130 is configured and arranged to facilitate volatization of the treatment fluid. Consequently, treatment fluid 120 is dispensed in vapor form 135 to a local environment at an enhanced rate compared to evaporation from the surface of a quantity of that treatment fluid at room temperature in undisturbed air.
- a housing, generally indicated at 140 is provided to maintain the heat source 130 in operable association with the treatment fluid 120 .
- An exemplary emanator element 110 may be manufactured from, or include, material capable of uptaking treatment fluid for storage of treatment fluid inside a storage volume of, or associated with, the emanator element 110 .
- a workable emanator material permits migration of treatment fluid from the storage volume to a surface area from which the treatment fluid may volatize (or evaporate), to dispense treatment fluid as a vapor into the local environment.
- uptaking it is intended to mean a process including one of more of absorbing, adsorbing, diffusing, and chemically reacting.
- Workable emanator material nonexclusively includes cotton, paper, cellulose, woven textile or random mat or 3-dimensional structure comprising natural or synthetic fibers, natural or synthetic open or closed cell sponge, high surface area (HSA) materials having a surface area greater than 10 m 2 /gm, diffusion membrane, porous metal, metallic textile or fabric, and the like.
- An emanator 110 may be configured to resemble a paper cup, balloon, cylinder, cube, shapeless mass, or any other desired shape.
- Preferred emanator elements 110 provide a vapor-emitting surface area of at least 1000 mm 2 .
- a workable treatment fluid 120 may encompass one or more of scented oil, medicament, and insect repellant or insecticide.
- Volatile treatment fluid 120 within contemplation broadly include insect control chemicals, pest control chemicals, essential oils, and medicant chemicals. More specifically, operable insect control chemicals may include one or more of Deet, Picardine, Icaradin, IR3535, Metofluthrin, 1-methylpiperazine, or Permethrine, as well as Natural chemicals such as citriodiol and Oil of Lemon Eucalyptus . It is within contemplation that any volatizable fluid may be used in an assembly 100 as a treatment fluid 120 for application of the fluid's vapor 135 to a local environment.
- a currently preferred fluid 120 is in a solidified form to reduce potential for spills and creation of a mess.
- solidified form or “solidified fluid” it is intended to mean that the subject fluid is substantially confined in a medium to resist free-flowing fluid.
- Exemplary solidified fluid may be adsorbed or uptaken into a media such as a high surface area material.
- a workable fluid-holding media includes a material selected from the group including adsorbent high-surface area ceramic, Alumina, ⁇ -form Alumina, Silica, activated carbon, carbon black, molecular sieves, zeolite, biopolymers such as cellulose sponge, absorbent fabric including cotton, cellulose, and the like.
- a workable adsorbent material may also include a material selected from the group including bitumen, wood dust, paper ffleché, plastic clay, earth clay, cotton dust, ash, and cement powder.
- a high-surface area material provides an available surface area that is greater than about 10 m 2 /g of material.
- the resulting combination of fluid and media to produce a solidified fluid provides the fluid in usable form (e.g., for broadcast to a local environment, or to cause a chemical reaction), but does not present free flowing liquid. Consequently, solidified fluid will not cause a mess if the media providing the solidified fluid is spilled.
- a flameless heat source 130 is distinguished from a source of heat that is produced by conventionally burning a fuel in a flame (e.g., burning propane, butane, white gas, paraffin, oil, wood, paper, and the like).
- One currently preferred heat source 130 includes an arrangement of chemical ingredients that can react on-demand in a flameless exothermic chemical reaction. An exemplary such arrangement is found in commercially available hand or body warmers, such as hand warmers sold under the trade name “HOT and HOT”.
- a workable flameless heat source 130 includes an electrical circuit configured to create heat. For example, a battery or capacitor may be placed in circuit to discharge through a resistor or heater element. A quickly-discharged battery itself may constitute a flameless heat source 130 .
- Another flameless heat source includes solar radiation, which may be harnessed to impart heat energy to volatize a treatment agent. For example, a heat transferring portion of an assembly according to certain principles of the invention may be coated with a substance such as copper oxide (CuO).
- CuO copper oxide
- air-activated hand warmers can be made from Iron Fe, Cellulose C6H10O5, Activated carbon C, Water H2O, Polypropylene sack C3H6, Salt NaCl, and Vermiculite (MgFeAl)3(AlSi)4O10(OH)24H2O. Iron and Oxygen react producing heat. Water is the medium in which the Iron and the Oxygen react. Salt is a catalyst through the water speeding up the reaction. Activated carbon acts like charcoal in a BBQ grill and disperses the heat around the hand warmer. Vermiculite insulates the reaction in the hand warmer so it lasts longer. Cellulose takes up space/sometimes replaced with saw dust. Polypropylene sack keeps the moisture within the hand warmer.
- some sort of self-heating chemical system using one or more primary components for exothermic reactions (such as calcium oxide), one or more porous components that can serve as a heat sink and conductor of heat as well as undergoing chemical transformations that release heat (zeolite), a weak acid (citric acid) for sustained modulation of temperature and pH.
- exothermic reactions mixing of some chemicals, sorption of certain chemicals, phase changes in chemicals, and dissolution of some chemicals in solvents release heat during these operations.
- the rate of heat generation coupled with mass and energy transfer rates to or from system(s) allows modulation of the temperature of systems. The modulation can be further enhanced by controlled release and availability of some of the components.
- This method provides with a class of self-heating product applications and focuses on the modulation of temperature through sequestering of reactions with different rates, heat release through dissolution, heat release through mixing, heat release through sorption, heat release through phase change as well as controlling mass and heat transfer rates.
- a housing 140 may be provided to hold the heat source 130 in operable association with the treatment fluid 120 .
- a workable housing 140 provides an avenue through which vaporized treatment fluid may be broadcast from stored or bulk treatment fluid to the local environment.
- a housing 140 may include one or more aperture, generally 145 , to permit passage of vapor from inside to outside of the housing.
- a workable aperture includes a pore in a diffusion membrane, space between fibers in a mat or cloth, window, door, gap, hole, louver, or other opening, and the like.
- a housing 140 may also provide a protective or safety function.
- a housing 140 can be configured to resist access to stored treatment fluid 120 that is confined inside the housing.
- a housing 140 may provide a protective physical barrier to resist placing a portion of an emanator 110 in a child's mouth, or to resist access of a child's tongue to a harmful chemical.
- One preferred housing 140 includes a closure element that resists nondestructive disassembly, and thereby, resists undesired access by a user to any potentially harmful contents inside the housing.
- Assembly 100 may include a removable or openable gas barrier 150 .
- a gas barrier 150 may operate to resist undesired initiation of an exothermic chemical reaction.
- An air barrier 150 may sometimes resist broadcast of vapors of treatment fluid prior to the time that a user places the assembly 100 into operation.
- An exemplary gas barrier 150 may be made from a sealed foil or plastic membrane. Location of a workable barrier 150 may be selected depending on its desired function.
- a barrier 150 may protectively envelop only a heat source 130 to restrict ingress of oxygen to an exothermic combination of ingredients.
- a barrier 150 may envelop the entire assembly 100 , and can even function as packaging for sale.
- a volume inside barrier 150 may be evacuated, or filled with an inert gas during manufacture.
- a trigger mechanism 160 may be included in certain embodiments of an assembly 100 . When present, a trigger mechanism 160 may be operated to permit or cause flameless heat source 130 to generate heat. Many forms of an operable trigger mechanism 160 may be envisioned.
- a first exemplary trigger mechanism 160 can be constructed to pierce the wall of a container to combine ingredients for an exothermic reaction.
- a second exemplary trigger mechanism 160 may be constructed to release treatment fluid from confinement operably to place treatment fluid in contact with a heat source.
- a safety mechanism 170 may be included to resist undesired operation of a trigger mechanism 160 .
- Certain assemblies 100 may include a gas generating element 180 .
- a workable gas generating element 180 can be disposed in association with treatment fluid 120 to facilitate evaporation of the treatment fluid by way of gas flow.
- Gas generators within contemplation nonexclusively include a fan and chemicals to cause effervescent chemical reactions.
- thermally conducting element 190 may be included in an assembly 100 .
- the thermally conductive element 190 is arranged to facilitate transmission of heat from the heat source 130 to the treatment fluid 120 .
- a workable heat conducting element 190 includes a metallic element, such as Aluminum foil.
- a heat conducting element 190 may also function as a barrier to confine one or more element, fluid, or vapor.
- a thermally conductive element 190 may be perforated or provide access openings to facilitate transmission of treatment fluid in vapor form 135 .
- an energized emanator assembly 100 may be constructed to place treatment fluid 120 (and/or sometimes, a constituent material of a heat source), in a solidized form.
- solidized it is intended to mean that the treatment fluid 120 is in condition to resist spilling or otherwise leaking from the assembly 100 . Free-flowing fluid is distinguished over solidized fluid.
- Exemplary solidized treatment fluid may be formed by a process including adsorption or uptake of treatment fluid into one or more high surface area material, diffusion or adsorption of treatment fluid into a rubber or rubber-like material, or sufficiently complete absorption of treatment fluid into a substrate.
- a workable solidized water source includes water-jello or water beads.
- an emanator assembly 100 may include a termination mechanism 210 to stop the enhanced rate of emanation.
- An exemplary termination mechanism 210 may nonexclusively include: structure configured to permit sealing or resealing part or all of an emanator inside an air-tight envelope; structure configured to permit removal of the volatile fluid from an energizing environment of the emanator; structure configured to stop an exothermic reaction in a heat source 130 , and the like.
- a barrier 220 may function to resist access of oxygen from the atmosphere to combine with one or more material of the assembly 100 . In other cases, a barrier 220 may simply confine treatment vapors 135 inside a volume.
- a workable barrier 220 may also function as unit packaging, including display packaging for sale of an assembly 100 .
- Certain embodiments 100 may include a sequestering arrangement, generally 225 , for initial isolation of the treatment fluid from operable association with an emanator or heat source.
- treatment fluid 120 may be stored in assembly 100 separately from an emanator 110 . A user may then take action to place the operable ingredients together or create a working combination.
- an embodiment 100 may include a time-delay mechanism, generally 230 .
- a time-delay mechanism 230 may function in various useful ways. One way can be to delay peak energization of the assembly 100 for an extended period of time subsequent to placement of the assembly into service and compared to timed energy release rate from a device lacking the delay mechanism.
- a workable time-delay mechanism 230 can be based on fundamental effect of one or more material properties, or may employ an actual digital, electronic, or mechanical timer.
- Emanator assembly 100 in FIG. 2 illustrates principles of operation of certain energized emanator assemblies according to certain principles of the invention.
- Emanator assembly 100 in FIG. 2 includes a puck 250 that is introduced to a container 252 holding a fluid source 254 .
- a currently preferred fluid (water) source 254 is in a solidified form, such as water-gelatin, to reduce potential for spills and creation of a mess.
- Workable solidified water 254 provides source of water that is sufficient to cause an exothermic reaction, and thereby, operate the emanator assembly 100 .
- a puck 250 may be embodied as a tablet, or other convenient 3-dimensional object, or even in powder form.
- the composition of an exemplary puck 250 may include sodium bicarbonate, citric acid, and insect repellant. Calcium oxide or chloride chloride may be included in the puck 250 to generate on-demand heat during operation of emanator assembly 100 .
- the embodiment 100 illustrated in FIG. 3 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention.
- This emanator assembly 100 includes reactant materials, generally indicated at 256 , confined inside a vented container 252 .
- Exemplary reactant materials 256 may include heat-releasing material mixed with high surface area (HSA) material that is infiltrated with one or more treatment fluid.
- Reactant material 256 may be confined in any convenient manner, and may be embodied in a replaceable or rechargeable cartridge.
- An exothermic reaction within the reactant material 256 may be caused by exposure of the reactant material to a source of water, including humidity present in a local treatment atmosphere.
- Volatized treatment fluid in vapor phase 135 exits the container through one or more aperture 258 .
- a hook 260 exemplifies a structure to conveniently hold the emanator 100 for emanation of treatment fluid in vapor form 135 in a local environment.
- Illustrated hook 260 may be considered as generally representing an element configured to support the apparatus from a cooperating perch.
- a perch may be embodied as a stick, rod, upstanding plate edge, or other support structure arranged to cooperate with the hook 260 .
- a cooperating hook and perch may function to associate an embodiment with a mobile or stationary local environment.
- a hook specifically encompasses a spring loaded clip
- a perch specifically encompasses an article of clothing or a personal item such as a backpack or purse.
- Alternative holding or support structure within contemplation includes a simple base to support assembly 100 on a flat surface, such as a table top.
- the embodiment 100 illustrated in FIG. 4 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention.
- This emanator assembly 100 includes container 252 configured as a vented cage 264 to hold the constituent components, and an air-tight packaging envelope 266 to prevent premature exothermic reaction.
- a workable cage 264 may include louvers, generally 268 , or other aperture structure to permit emanation of vapor 135 from the emanator element 110 to a local environment. Humidity in ambient air may be used in combination with removal of the packaging envelope 266 as a triggering mechanism to start an exothermic reaction.
- the illustrated emanator element 110 is directly coupled in thermally operable registration with exothermic material confined inside the heat source 130 . Activated thermal material energizes the treatment fluid 120 that is embedded or dispersed in the emanator 110 , and a vapor 135 is emanated through a louver 268 to the local atmosphere.
- the embodiment 100 illustrated in FIG. 5 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention.
- This emanator assembly 100 includes exothermic material 274 with treatment fluid dispersed within, loaded into, or uptaken by, the exothermic mixture 274 (or, sometimes the confining envelope 276 ), of an exothermic heat source 130 .
- Operation of emanator assemblies 100 in FIGS. 4 and 5 are similar. Operation of the assemblies 100 may be started by simply opening the packaging envelope 266 . These assemblies 100 will operate in an energized state until either the treatment fluid 120 is all evaporated, or the exothermic capability of the heat source 130 is exhausted.
- the embodiment 100 illustrated in FIG. 6 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention.
- This emanator assembly 100 includes a thermally conductive housing 282 (e.g., a metal tube) to initially confine treatment fluid 120 .
- Housing 282 is disposed in direct contact with a heat source 130 that is embodied as an exothermic patch.
- the thermally conductive housing 282 is exemplary of an optional heat conducting element 190 to transfer heat from the activated exothermal material 274 into the fluid 120 , and thereby enhance emanation of a vapor 135 of the fluid 120 into the local environment.
- the embodiment 100 illustrated in FIG. 7 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention.
- This emanator assembly 100 includes an initiating trigger mechanism, generally indicated at 292 .
- the mechanism 292 includes a piercer 294 , and a safety arrestor 296 .
- Arrestor 296 resists undesired operation of the piercer 294 .
- Treatment fluid 120 held in fluid container 298 is released by user operation of the piercer 294 , and is allowed to contact a portion of the heat source 130 .
- Fluid 120 may sometimes be dispersed into a porous bag 300 , and/or may be uptaken in the exothermic material 274 .
- the illustrated heat source 130 is structured similarly to a commercially available hand warmer. After the air-tight packaging 266 is removed, heat source 130 is activated by oxygen present in the air. Heat from the source 130 energizes the liquid 120 , and vapor 135 is transmitted at an enhanced rate through porous container 252 into the local environment.
- the emanator assembly 100 illustrated in FIG. 8 is substantially similar to that illustrated in FG. 7 . A difference is the arrangement of a membrane 302 that initially confines treatment fluid 120 . Operation of the trigger mechanism 292 places released fluid 120 into direct contact with exothermic material 274 .
- the emanator assembly 100 illustrated in FIG. 9 includes elements mentioned above, which are numbered accordingly.
- This emanator assembly 100 includes a thermally conductive porous treatment fluid-absorbing jacket 302 .
- Jacket 302 is preloaded with a quantity of treatment fluid 120 .
- oxygen in the local atmosphere permeates into contact with exothermic material 274 , and causes generation of heat.
- Treatment vapor 135 is consequently emitted through pores or apertures 268 for broadcast into the local environment.
- the emanator assembly 100 illustrated in FIG. 10 includes a fluid-holding container 308 disposed between first and second exothermic patches 310 and 312 , respectively.
- container 308 is a thermally conductive tube.
- An Aluminum tube works well.
- Treatment fluid 120 is retained inside the container 308 by a porous cap or plug 314 .
- Treatment vapor 135 may pass through the plug 308 to treat the local environment.
- Patches 310 , 312 may be held in operable association with container 308 by an assembly aide, such as a hook-and-loop strap.
- Activation of thermal patches 310 , 312 by opening the air-tight packaging envelope 266 energizes the assembly 100 , and emits treatment vapor at an enhanced rate.
- the emanator assembly 100 illustrated in FIG. 11 includes a thermally insulating porous cover or jacket 318 to hold a quantity of exothermic material 274 .
- Cover 320 holds exothermic material 274 inside the jacket 318 .
- Opening air-tight seal 266 starts an exothermic chemical reaction, and energizes the assembly 100 .
- Treatment fluid 120 is heated by the exothermic reaction. Consequently, treatment vapor 135 is broadcast through jacket 318 to the local environment at an enhanced rate.
- Saturated sodium acetate solution 328 confined inside a container 330 may be activated to produce an exothermic reaction by a user's operation of an activation mechanism, generally indicated at 334 .
- the activator slider 336 may be depressed to cause a metal scraper 338 to form nucleation or initiation sites for the saturated solution 328 to form crystals and release heat.
- the temperature may reach 55 degrees C., or so, and can be modulated with chemical attenuators.
- Heat applied to the treatment fluid 120 facilitates volatilization of fluid, and causes treatment vapor 135 to migrate through a porous plug 340 to the local atmosphere.
- a heat insulating container 330 may facilitate maintaining an elevated temperature in association with the treatment fluid 120 for an extended period of time.
- the solution 328 may be recharged by heating assembly 100 by a recharging source.
- a workable recharging source 342 includes boiling water, or microwaving the solution 328 to dissolve the crystals. Subsequently, the assembly 100 is ready for reuse.
- the energized emanator assembly 100 illustrated in FIG. 13 includes a thermally insulating container 330 arranged to hold a quantity of exothermic material 274 ′ that includes exothermic material 274 premixed with a quantity of treatment fluid 120 .
- Exothermic material 274 ′ may, for examples, be in powder of block form.
- Suitable material of construction for a container 330 includes ceramic and plastic.
- assembly 100 includes an effervescent material 350 and a water source 352 .
- a workable effervescent material may include citric acid and sodium bicarbonate.
- Water obtained from source 350 causes a gas-forming reaction, and enhances rate of discharge of vapor 135 from the discharge port, pore, aperture, or neck 354 .
- a preferred water source resists presence of free water that can spill and make a mess.
- a workable water source includes an arrangement of water-jello or water beads, or sometimes a water-loaded powder or quantity of high surface area material.
- a water source may include CMC and water.
- the energized emanator assembly 100 illustrated in FIG. 14 is structured similarly to that illustrated in FIG. 13 . However, in FIG. 14 the container 330 is arranged as a box with an operable lid 356 .
- the embodiment 100 illustrated in FIG. 15 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention.
- This assembly 100 includes an air-activated exothermic material 274 disposed inside a porous pouch-like container 252 .
- Treatment fluid is combined with high surface area (HSA) material.
- HSA high surface area
- the HSA material may be provided as a plurality of commercially available substantially round ceramic beads 360 .
- HSA material in powder form and other geometric shapes is workable.
- An exothermic reaction is initiated when a user tears open the packaging material 266 at time of desired use of the assembly 100 . Heat from the exothermic reaction facilitates volatization of treatment fluid dispersed inside the HSA material. Consequently, treatment fluid in vapor form 135 is applied to the local environment at an enhanced rate.
- An advantage of this assembly 100 is its inherent resistance to fluid spills and resulting mess.
- the embodiment 100 illustrated in FIG. 16 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention.
- This emanator assembly 100 includes treatment fluid 120 that is stored in pocket 362 separately from the exothermic material 274 .
- Pocket 362 is exemplary of a sequestering arrangement 225 .
- FIG. 17 illustrates an assembly 100 including a time-delay mechanism 230 that is constructed to cause energizing activity to begin, or to increase, after a period of time in use.
- the rate of emanation of a treatment fluid 10 can be enhanced at that time when its conventional (unenergized) emanation would be inherently reduced.
- a boundary (sponge 370 ) is provided around a heat-producing material 274 .
- exothermic material 274 is confined inside a porous pouch container 252 , which is surrounded by sponge 370 .
- a desired amount of treatment fluid 120 is dispersed or uptaken into sponge 370 .
- the boundary defined by the sponge 370 resists activation of the heat-producing material 274 until a point in time where the emanation of vapor 135 from the sponge 370 is normally reduced, and subsequent addition of heat can then beneficially restore rate of emanation of vapor 135 of an emanating device to a higher (energized and enhanced) level.
- One workable boundary element can include walls of cellulose sponge that are impregnated with treatment fluid.
- Another workable boundary includes encapsulating walls of high surface area material, such as ceramic, which are loaded with treatment fluid. Air may pass through a workable boundary material and into the exothermic mixture after a sufficient amount of treatment fluid 120 has evaporated, and a path for air ingress opens up.
- fluid molecules are depleted from the perimeter boundary of the sponge as the device ages (emanates), consequently permitting oxygen to penetrate into contact with and activate the heat-generating material.
- Produced heat increases emanation of the remaining treatment fluid, and tends to maintain emanation from the device closer to a constant level until the end of its useful life.
- the embodiment of assembly 100 illustrated in FIG. 18 incorporates an energy storage device, generally 372 , in-circuit to discharge stored energy and convert that energy to heat.
- the generated heat is harnessed to volatize a treatment fluid for broadcast of a treatment vapor 135 to a local environment.
- an energy storage device 372 such as a battery or capacitor may be placed in circuit through a switch 374 to a resistor element 376 .
- the switch 374 may be closed at a point in time when vapor of treatment agent 135 is desired in the local environment.
- the electrical energy stored in the battery 373 is converted to heat. Heat may be generated by the resistor 376 .
- a workable thermal shield 380 may be constructed of polypropylene, or other material with thermal insulating qualities, to ensure generated heat is driven into the treatment fluid 120 .
- the carrier material 378 is desirably disposed for good thermal communication with the energy storing element or heat source 372 .
- a carrier material 378 may be considered as an absorber/emitter, because the carrier material 378 is loaded by treatment fluid 120 during manufacture of the assembly 100 , then emits treatment in vapor form 135 during operation of the device 100 .
- Workable materials of construction for a carrier material 378 include porous polymers, cotton and other fabric, felt, and the like.
- a fluid-holding container 252 holds a bulk quantity of volatile treatment substance 120 in fluid form and has a diffusion membrane 386 located to be wetted by the treatment substance 120 under the influence of gravity.
- a workable diffusion membrane 386 may be constructed from nano- or microporous polymer membrane material, including microporous polyethylene.
- One or more exothermic material 274 is distributed around a perimeter of the container 252 to provide heat to the container, and thereby enhance evolution of vapor 135 from the bulk fluid source of treatment vapor.
- This device 100 is sometimes configured for placement in an airstream, such as in association with an automobile's air vent or other source of air flow. The airstream also promotes broadcast of a fluid treatment substance in vapor form 135 into the local environment.
- FIG. 20 illustrates an embodiment 100 constructed to start an exothermic reaction upon opening of the air-tight package 266 .
- An exemplary thermal material mix 274 may be a dry exothermic mixture of Iron, NaCl, vermiculite and carbon similar to the mix contained in commercially available hand and body warmers. Moisture present in the local atmosphere is typically sufficient to initiate an exothermic reaction.
- the exothermic reaction may be accelerated by a user actuating the activating mechanism 294 to allow hydrogen peroxide or water to mix with the powdered dry exothermic mixture.
- Iron may be substituted by another metal, such as Aluminum, Magnesium, or Calcium.
- NaCl may be substituted for by NaOCl.
- the temperature achieved by the exothermic mixture may be adjusted by the addition of water vs hydrogen peroxide, with the latter causing a hotter reaction.
- Treatment fluid 120 may be loaded into, or uptaken by, container 252 , which can be an air permeable bag or other porous housing workable to confine the exothermic material 274 .
- the energized assembly 100 illustrated in FIG. 21 includes a water-tight container 252 with internal partitions in which to hold an effervescent material 392 and water beads 394 in initial isolation from each other. Treatment fluid may be included in the mixture 392 .
- Water beads 394 are commercially available under the name “water beads”, and are compounds including a polymer. Water beads 394 are non-edible beads, made of a combination of water and a water-absorbing polymer. When dry water beads 394 are immersed in water, they fill up and expand like a sponge. When the effervescent material 392 contacts the water beads 394 , a slow exothermic reaction begins. The reaction is slowed by the water beads' slow surrender of water to the reaction.
- lid 356 is sufficiently porous to permit off-gas release of treatment vapors.
- container 252 and lid 356 are connected to confine the mix of treatment fluid 120 and effervescent material 392 , and are sufficiently flexible to permit twisting of massaging the container 252 to rupture membrane 396 .
- a ruptured membrane 396 permits the mixture 120 / 392 to contact water beads 394 and cause an exothermic reaction to energize dispersal of treatment vapor 135 into the local atmosphere.
- FIG. 22 illustrates an embodiment 100 which includes a thermally conductive cup or container 400 for improved heat transfer from an exemplary hand or body warmer-type exothermic device 130 into the fluid treatment substance 120 .
- An exemplary container 400 may be made from metal having good thermal conductivity, such as Aluminum or copper.
- Treatment substance 120 may sometimes be in solidized form to resist fluid spills and mess. Opening the air-tight package 266 initiates the exothermic reaction, as described variously above.
- Treatment fluid in vapor form 135 may be emitted into the local atmosphere through a porous seal 402 .
- an air-tight seal 402 may be removed, leaving behind a porous membrane or other element to resist spill of treatment fluid 120 while permitting escape of vapor 135 .
- the embodiment 100 illustrated in FIG. 23 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention.
- This emanator assembly 100 includes a housing 140 configured to hold an emanator element 110 .
- the housing 140 has a plurality of spaced-apart rails 404 .
- housing 140 is configured, in part, to provide a safety mechanism 170 .
- safety mechanism 170 is to resist contact between a user and a potentially harmful ingredient of the assembly.
- a gap between adjacent rails 404 can be too narrow or small to allow penetration of a child's tongue into the interior of the housing.
- rails 404 can operate to space a user by a safe distance from contact with a hot portion of the assembly 100 .
- a lid 356 or cap 406 may be configured to fit in permanent engagement over an access opening of the housing subsequent to manufacture assembly.
- the desirably tamper-proof housing 140 in FIG. 23 can be configured upon assembly (of the cooperating cap 406 onto the housing 140 ), to resist nondestructive disassembly and unauthorized user access to e.g., the emanator element 110 .
- a workable housing 140 may be manufactured by injection molding from an inexpensive plastic material. Sometimes, a housing may be treated to provide, or its constituent material(s) may be inherently of, enhanced biodegradability. Certain housings 140 can form part of an assembly 100 that is regarded as disposable after a single use. For purpose of this disclosure, enhanced biodegradability means decompose in a landfill within 5 years.
- the illustrated and preferred emanator 110 is configured as a conical shell made of paper, or paper-like material, similar to a drinking cup.
- Emanator element 110 is exemplary of an element that is configured as a shell of revolution about an open core.
- Treatment fluid 120 may be dispersed into a volume of certain constituent material of the emanator 110 . That treatment fluid 120 may then migrate toward and volatize at the surface of the emanator element 110 to broadcast vapor 135 to the local environment.
- An optional heat conducting element 190 may be included in the assembly 100 of FIG. 23 .
- a workable element 190 includes a metal foil, similar to tin foil. Sometimes, and as illustrated, the element 190 may be perforated. Other times, element 190 may be configured as an uninterrupted membrane, and can form a barrier for fluid migration from emanator 110 toward an energizing element 130 .
- an energizing element 130 is configured for assembled reception inside the open core of emanator element 110 .
- a workable energizing element 130 is operable to facilitate volatizing the treatment fluid 120 to broadcast vapor 135 from the surface of the emanator.
- a currently preferred energizing element 130 includes a flameless mix of exothermic materials 274 such as described above.
- a removable gas barrier 150 is desirably included in association with the energizing element 130 , in part, to resist undesired propagation of an exothermic reaction.
- packaging envelope 266 can form a convenient air-tight arrangement to resist unintended actuation of the energizing element 130 .
- the assembly 100 in FIG. 24 includes a differently configured housing 140 that includes legs 410 and an aperture 412 .
- Aperture 412 provides a bottom entrance to a chimney 414 extending through the heat source 130 .
- Chimney 414 may be characterized as a void disposed in vertical penetration through an upstanding length of the elongate heat source 130 .
- Aperture 416 extends vertically through cap 406 and provides an upper exit portion of the chimney 414 .
- Cap 406 may also be configured to provide protective rails and apertures, as illustrated in FIG. 24 .
- the heat source 130 in FIG. 24 may be formed by rolling a commercially available hand warmer to make a vertically oriented open-cored cylinder or tube. Sometimes, a reinforcement (e.g., mesh or screen core) may be provided to enforce a desired hollow cylinder shape.
- the open core provides a chimney 414 . A vertical draft is caused in the chimney 414 as the hand warmer heats up, and the draft promotes oxygen uptake by the exothermically active chemicals of the hand warmer. Consequently, the heat source 130 can reach significantly higher operating temperatures than seen during their conventional use.
- Table 1 below presents experimental data obtained by measuring the surface temperature of a variety of commercially available hand warmers after operation for one hour of exposure to 25° C. still ambient air. Individual hand warmers were removed from their respective packages, and simply suspended from a string in ambient (still) air. The hand warmers were exposed to air on all sides (uninsulated). No attempt was made to change their shape from the conventional “flat” shape as removed from their air-tight packaging. Temperatures were measured by thermocouple and laser thermometer.
- a chimney can increase the operating temperature of a commercially available hand warmer due to increasing oxygen availability for the chemical reaction.
- the surface temperature of one prototype reached 63° C. after one hour of operation.
- This prototype included a rolled-up commercially available hand warmer that was wrapped in a foil cylinder, and then wrapped in a cylindrical paper emanator, still air, 25° C. ambient air temperature.
- Dissection of commercially available hand warmers indicates that the bag material used to confine the exothermic mixture of chemicals is nonporous to the naked eye. Further, the material appears to be coated on the inside bag surface, logically reducing the porosity and permeability to oxygen or air. It is believed that a bag or ingredient-housing having low permeability to air is desired to provide a longer time increment for operation at a mild temperature as a hand warmer.
- hand warmers operate at less than 65° C. to avoid burning the user.
- the large 156 g hand warmer in Table 1 is a “super” model, intended for use at extreme low temperatures. Consequently, the hand warmer's surface temperature realized during its conventional use at a lower ambient temperature (where heat is extracted from the hand warmer at a faster rate by the lower temperature) would logically be lower than that measured at room temperature.
- certain embodiments may include a bag or housing 418 made from a porous material 420 to promote availability of oxygen for the exothermic reaction.
- a porous material 420 includes cheese cloth.
- a workable swath of commercially available hand woven cotton cheese cloth was optically measured to possess about 35 threads per inch (tpi).
- tpi threads per inch
- a humanly perceptible effect can be felt by a test hand's skin on one side of a two-layered 35 tpi cotton cheese cloth bag when blowing perpendicularly through pursed lips at the other side of the cloth stack formed by an empty bag.
- no effect is perceptible by the test hand when substituting the cloth bag for an empty bag from a commercially available hand warmer.
- Contents of a commercially available 156 g hand warmer were dumped into a hand woven 35 tpi cotton cheese cloth bag, and after one hour of operation in still ambient 25° C. air, the bag surface temperature was 87° C.
- Porosity of certain commercially available bags was contrasted to comparably shaped cloth bags using water as a test media.
- 100 cc of water passed through a hand woven cheese cloth bag in less than 2 seconds.
- 100 cc of water passed through a machine woven cotton bag (purchased on-line from Amazon) in about 12 seconds.
- the empty bag from a ThermahandTM hand warmer was also tested with 100 cc of water. After 120 seconds, only a trace amount of moisture was visible on the outer surface of the hand warmer's bag.
- Certain embodiments may include one ore more portion of a bag 418 that is of enhanced porosity compared to commercially available hand warmers. It is within contemplation that apertures of porous material may be provided in opposite ends of an elongate bag 418 to function cooperatively as a chimney. A draft effect somewhat equivalent to that from a chimney may be provided by an embodiment having a bag 418 that is entirely porous. It is further within contemplation that a bag, itself, may provide the volume in which to hold a quantity of treatment agent.
- a workable bag may be made from porous metal, or metallized fabric.
- an assembly 100 may include an anode, a cathode, and an electrolyte with one of the anode or cathode being isolated, or the electrolyte being isolated in whole or in part until a user performs a release operation to permit operable combination of the anode, cathode, and electrolyte to cause an exothermic chemical reaction.
- Certain self-sufficient embodiments carry all of the constituent elements required for combination to cause and sustain an exothermic reaction.
- Other embodiments may obtain one or more elements from a local environment during operation of the device.
- a fluid element 428 (often, a portion of the required electrolyte) is sequestered inside chamber 430 until a user operates plunger 432 as a puncturing tool to rupture membrane 434 .
- the fluid element 428 can then be mixed with the remainder of the exothermic materials 436 confined inside thermally conductive housing 282 .
- a vented cage 264 can resist premature operation of the plunger 432 , and provide a safety barrier to resist contact between a user and a hazardous portion of the assembly 100 .
- An emanator 438 typically surrounds the housing 282 to facilitate heat transfer from the confined and reacting exothermic materials to a treatment fluid contained in the emanator 438 .
- the housing includes a portion of metallic construction to facilitate heat transfer.
- a separate metallic element may be disposed between the housing 282 and the emanator 438 to enhance conveyance of heat.
- Packaging 266 may provide a barrier to resist undesired release of treatment agent into a local environment, or to resist initiation of the exothermic reaction.
- Electrolytes listed in Table 2 are broken down into their salt and a cooperating solvent.
- the solvent is the sequestered element.
- workable embodiments 100 may be constructed wherein the sequestered element may be an anode, a cathode, or the entire electrolyte.
- An embodiment may be constructed to harness heat released from hot water for use to energize an emanator.
- a user may heat a quantity of water to, or near, boiling, and associate the heated water with an emanator that carries a treatment agent.
- an emanator may be wrapped around a metal container. The user may use the container to hold the heated water for transfer of heat from the water to the agent disposed inside the emanator.
- An embodiment according to certain aspects of the instant invention may be encompassed in a method to manufacture a device for dispensing vapor of a treatment agent.
- One such method includes the step of providing an emanator having a surface area disposed in operable association with a volume. That method further includes the step of disposing a quantity of liquid treatment agent inside the volume to permit emanation of treatment fluid in vapor phase from the surface area.
- a further step includes disposing a quantity of an exothermic chemical mixture as a heat source in operable association with the volume to apply heat energy to the treatment agent therein to volatize the fluid and cause the enhanced emanation of treatment fluid in vapor phase from the surface.
- a preferred exothermic reaction is air-activated.
- the quantity is configured and arranged to exothermically react for a period of time in excess of four hours subsequent to exposure to air.
- a further step may optionally include disposing a metallic thermally conductive element between the emanator and the heat source.
- a further step includes disposing the emanator, heat source, and conductive element inside of a housing comprising an aperture configured to dispense treatment vapor to a local environment. Sometimes, the housing may be configured to resist unauthorized contact with the emanator.
- a final step may include disposing the housing inside an air-tight envelope to delay production of heat until a user-selected instance in time.
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Abstract
Description
- This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Utility patent application Ser. No. 17/322,849, filed May 17, 2021, for “FLAMELESS ENERGIZED EMANATOR”, and claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of the filing date of Provisional Applications Ser. No. 63/120,664, filed Dec. 2, 2020, for “ENERGIZED EMANATOR”; and Ser. No. 63/133,686, filed Jan. 4, 2021, for “ENERGIZED EMANATOR”, the entire disclosures of which are all hereby incorporated herein by this reference.
- This invention relates to devices configured to dispense a treatment agent in vapor phase into a local environment and at an enhanced rate compared to surface evaporation from a quantity of the treatment agent in liquid phase at room temperature in undisturbed air.
- Several ways are known to treat a local environment with a dispersed treatment fluid. One way to treat a local environment is to simply spray aerosol scent or mosquito repellant into the air. Devices such as perfumed or scented candles are available to create a pleasing smell in a local environment. Citronella candles are commercially available for insect abatement, and may be burned when treatment of a local area is desired. For mosquito relief, various machines may be employed to burn propane and emit a fog of repellant or poison. Some machines attract mosquitos and employ suction to capture them in a bag. Other devices attract insects, and kill them with a spark of electricity. These currently available products either lack sufficient efficacy, are cumbersome to use, or are too costly to gain wide acceptance. It would be an improvement to provide an effective product that is simple to use and sufficiently low cost to permit its disposal after a single use.
- Embodiments typically includes an emanator element, a treatment agent associated with the emanator, and an energizing source to enhance emanation of the treatment agent in vapor phase. An emanator element typically has a surface area disposed in operable association with a volume in which to hold a quantity of treatment agent. A preferred emanator has a vapor-emitting surface area in excess of about 1000 mm2. Treatment agent volatizes, sublimates, or evaporates from the surface area to broadcast treatment agent in vapor phase. A workable emanator element may include a material selected from cotton, paper, cellulose, woven or nonwoven textile or random mat or sheet or 3-dimensional structure comprising natural or synthetic fibers, natural or synthetic open or closed cell sponge, high surface area (HSA) materials having a surface area greater than 10 m2/gm, diffusion membrane, porous metal, metallized fabric, and the like.
- The flameless energizing source may be disposed in a variety of operable configurations with the volume to apply heat energy to the treatment agent therein. Certain embodiments may include a treatment agent-holding volume that is directly bounded in part or in whole by the surface area. In one such case, a flameless heat source may be partially or fully surrounded by the volume to dispose the volume between the heat source and the evaporating surface area. Sometimes, the entire quantity of treatment agent contained in an assembly is disposed to simultaneously receive heat from the heat source. A workable embodiment may include an agent storage volume that is configured to receive energizing input on a portion of its volume-defining boundary area. Sometimes, the volume-defining boundary area may include the vapor-discharging surface area. For non-limiting example, certain embodiments may include a bulk storage volume from which a wicking element draws treatment agent for evaporation of the treatment agent from a surface area of the wick. Other operable arrangements will occur to one of ordinary skill.
- A workable treatment agent may be selected from scented oil, medicament, and insect repellant or insecticide. In some cases, treatment agent may be in fluid phase. Sometimes, the treatment agent may be provided in a solidified form to resist spills and mess. In one such case, treatment agent fluid may be uptaken by a high surface area material from which treatment agent vapor may be released. Sometimes, the treatment agent may be provided in solid phase at room temperature. Heat energy may be applied to a treatment agent that is in liquid phase, solid phase, or solidified form to enhance broadcast of treatment agent in vapor phase to a local environment.
- Desirably, the assembly includes a housing configured to contain the emanator and the heat source. An exemplary housing includes a plurality of apertures to permit migration of treatment agent in vapor state from the surface area to a local environment. A housing can be configured to define a safety perimeter. For example, a housing may be configured to resist contact of the emanator with a child's tongue or fingers. A housing may sometimes be configured to resist user contact with a heated portion. A preferred housing includes a base configured to support the energized assembly on top of a surface under the influence of gravity. Certain housings may include an upstanding wall to hold apertures through which vapor may pass to the local environment. One housing may also include a cap to cover a volume defined inside the housing. It is within contemplation that the housing and cap may be configured to cooperate upon assembly of the emanating assembly to resist nondestructive disassembly and unauthorized access to the emanator element. In some cases, the housing can include a hook configured to support the assembly from a cooperating perch.
- A workable heat source may include one or more of: chemicals arranged to generate an on-demand exothermic reaction; structure or mechanism configured to absorb solar radiation (e.g., CuO coating); and an electrical circuit comprising a dry or wet cell battery disposed in a heat-generating configuration to generate heat within the battery. A workable heat source may include one or more commercially available battery from AAA to D cell size, or larger.
- Certain embodiments may include a removable gas barrier arranged to resist initiation of an exothermic chemical reaction associated with the energizing heat source. Embodiments may include a time-delay mechanism to delay activation of the heat source until after a period of time subsequent to first deployment of the assembly to treat a local environment. An embodiment may include a heat conducting element disposed between the heat source and the volume to facilitate heat transfer from the energizing heat source toward the volume. Sometimes, the heat conducting element may also operate to resist migration of treatment agent toward the heat source. One workable heat conducting element is metallic foil.
- Embodiments may optionally include a termination mechanism configured to resist further emanation of treatment agent in vapor state from the assembly to permit reuse of the apparatus at a subsequent time. Sometimes, an embodiment may include a trigger mechanism configured to initiate an exothermic reaction associated with the heat source. Embodiments may include a safety mechanism to resist undesired operation of the trigger mechanism. Embodiments may include an alternative safety mechanism to resist user access to a harmful component of the assembly. An exemplary safety mechanism to resist unauthorized access includes closely spaced apart louvers disposed around a perimeter of a tamper-proof housing.
- One preferred embodiment includes an emanator element configured as a shell of revolution about an open core, a volume of the shell to hold a treatment agent, the open core to hold a flameless heat source. A quantity of the treatment agent can conveniently be disposed in the shell's volume. Treatment agent may sometimes be stored in the volume as a solid or solidified fluid. The currently preferred embodiment includes a heat source disposed in the open core, the heat source comprising an exothermic mixture of chemicals arranged for on-demand production of heat. A heat conducting element is disposed between the chemicals and the emanator element to facilitate an even temperature profile applied to the treatment agent. The preferred embodiment also includes a housing with a plurality of spaced apart rails to provide a plurality of discharge apertures for a vapor of the treatment agent, the housing being configured to resist disassembly and unauthorized access to the emanator element. Further, an air-tight packaging envelope is disposed to resist combination of oxygen from a local atmosphere with the exothermic chemicals.
- An exemplary and substantially fully loaded embodiment includes an emanator element defining a volume in which to hold a treatment agent. Treatment agent can be a fluid. A quantity of the treatment agent is disposed in solidized form within the volume. A flameless heat source is disposed in operable association with the emanator, the heat source including an exothermic mixture of chemicals arranged for on-demand production of heat. A heat conducting element is disposed between the chemicals and the emanator element to promote application by the heat source of a uniform temperature profile onto the emanator. A housing is included to hold the emanator element in operable association with the heat source.
- The housing of this fully loaded embodiment also includes a plurality of discharge pores or apertures for a vapor of the treatment agent, and can also be configured to resist disassembly and unauthorized access to the emanator element. A trigger mechanism may be provided to cause the heat source to generate heat on-demand. A safety mechanism can also be provided to resist undesired operation of the trigger mechanism. A gas generating element may be disposed to enhance flow of treatment agent in vapor phase from the apertures. A termination mechanism may be provided to interrupt generation of heat by the heat source to permit reuse of the apparatus at a subsequent time. Sometimes, a sequestering arrangement holds a first ingredient out of contact with a second ingredient prior to actuation of the trigger mechanism. The assembly is typically packaged inside an air-tight packaging envelope to resist combination of oxygen from a local atmosphere with the exothermic chemicals prior to placement in service to treat a local environment.
- In the drawings, which illustrate what are currently considered to be the best modes for carrying out the invention:
-
FIG. 1 is a schematic view of an exemplary device structured according to certain principles of the invention; -
FIGS. 2 through 22 are schematic views in elevation of alternative embodiments within the ambit ofFIG. 1 ; -
FIG. 23 is an exploded assembly view in perspective of a currently preferred embodiment within the ambit ofFIG. 1 ; -
FIG. 24 is an exploded assembly view in perspective of another currently preferred embodiment within the ambit ofFIG. 1 ; and -
FIG. 25 is a schematic view in elevation of another currently preferred embodiment within the ambit ofFIG. 1 . - Reference will now be made to the drawings in which the various elements of the illustrated embodiments will be given numerical designations and in which the invention will be discussed so as to enable one skilled in the art to make and use the invention. It is to be understood that the following description is only exemplary of certain principles of the present invention, and should not be viewed as narrowing the claims which follow.
- An energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention is illustrated generally at 100 in
FIG. 1 .Embodiments 100 are typically self-contained, and desirably are portable to permit a person to easily move theassembly 100 to a desired location for operation to treat a local environment. Energizedemanator assemblies 100 are conventionally used to apply a treatment fluid in vapor form to a local atmospheric environment. Treatment fluids may sometimes have relatively low volatility, and consequently, emanation of a vapor from those or other fluids may be enhanced to an efficacious degree by the energizing portion of anemanator assembly 100. -
Embodiments 100 may be used, for nonexclusive examples, to treat a local atmosphere with a pleasing scent, beneficial treatment agent, or insect repellant. A local atmosphere may be stationary (e.g., due to an embodiment sitting on a table), or mobile (e.g., a user may wear an embodiment). Examples may be discussed below with reference to a particular fluid, such as insect repellant, but no limitation to any particular fluid is intended. Certain embodiments may be disposable after a single-use. Other embodiments may be recharged, or regenerated, to operate a plurality of times in succession. Anemanator assembly 100 according to certain principles of the invention may operate for a period of several hours, one or more days, weeks, months, or even longer. Onepreferred emanator assembly 100 may be constructed to operate for a period of between about four and eight hours, and then be discarded. It is within contemplation that part or all of anemanator assembly 100 may be structured to facilitate its biodegradability. - An
assembly 100 includes anemanator 110, a quantity oftreatment fluid 120, and aflameless heat source 130 or other mechanism to energize the assembly and cause enhanced emanation of a treatment substance. Anexemplary heat source 130 is configured and arranged to facilitate volatization of the treatment fluid. Consequently,treatment fluid 120 is dispensed invapor form 135 to a local environment at an enhanced rate compared to evaporation from the surface of a quantity of that treatment fluid at room temperature in undisturbed air. In certain cases, a housing, generally indicated at 140, is provided to maintain theheat source 130 in operable association with thetreatment fluid 120. - An
exemplary emanator element 110 may be manufactured from, or include, material capable of uptaking treatment fluid for storage of treatment fluid inside a storage volume of, or associated with, theemanator element 110. In any case, a workable emanator material permits migration of treatment fluid from the storage volume to a surface area from which the treatment fluid may volatize (or evaporate), to dispense treatment fluid as a vapor into the local environment. By “uptaking” it is intended to mean a process including one of more of absorbing, adsorbing, diffusing, and chemically reacting. Workable emanator material nonexclusively includes cotton, paper, cellulose, woven textile or random mat or 3-dimensional structure comprising natural or synthetic fibers, natural or synthetic open or closed cell sponge, high surface area (HSA) materials having a surface area greater than 10 m2/gm, diffusion membrane, porous metal, metallic textile or fabric, and the like. Anemanator 110 may be configured to resemble a paper cup, balloon, cylinder, cube, shapeless mass, or any other desired shape. Preferredemanator elements 110 provide a vapor-emitting surface area of at least 1000 mm2. - A
workable treatment fluid 120 may encompass one or more of scented oil, medicament, and insect repellant or insecticide.Volatile treatment fluid 120 within contemplation broadly include insect control chemicals, pest control chemicals, essential oils, and medicant chemicals. More specifically, operable insect control chemicals may include one or more of Deet, Picardine, Icaradin, IR3535, Metofluthrin, 1-methylpiperazine, or Permethrine, as well as Natural chemicals such as citriodiol and Oil of Lemon Eucalyptus. It is within contemplation that any volatizable fluid may be used in anassembly 100 as atreatment fluid 120 for application of the fluid'svapor 135 to a local environment. - A currently preferred
fluid 120 is in a solidified form to reduce potential for spills and creation of a mess. By “solidified form” or “solidified fluid” it is intended to mean that the subject fluid is substantially confined in a medium to resist free-flowing fluid. Exemplary solidified fluid may be adsorbed or uptaken into a media such as a high surface area material. A workable fluid-holding media includes a material selected from the group including adsorbent high-surface area ceramic, Alumina, γ-form Alumina, Silica, activated carbon, carbon black, molecular sieves, zeolite, biopolymers such as cellulose sponge, absorbent fabric including cotton, cellulose, and the like. A workable adsorbent material may also include a material selected from the group including bitumen, wood dust, paper mäché, plastic clay, earth clay, cotton dust, ash, and cement powder. For purpose of this disclosure, a high-surface area material provides an available surface area that is greater than about 10 m2/g of material. - The resulting combination of fluid and media to produce a solidified fluid provides the fluid in usable form (e.g., for broadcast to a local environment, or to cause a chemical reaction), but does not present free flowing liquid. Consequently, solidified fluid will not cause a mess if the media providing the solidified fluid is spilled.
- A
flameless heat source 130 according to the instant invention is distinguished from a source of heat that is produced by conventionally burning a fuel in a flame (e.g., burning propane, butane, white gas, paraffin, oil, wood, paper, and the like). One currently preferredheat source 130 includes an arrangement of chemical ingredients that can react on-demand in a flameless exothermic chemical reaction. An exemplary such arrangement is found in commercially available hand or body warmers, such as hand warmers sold under the trade name “HOT and HOT”. A workableflameless heat source 130 includes an electrical circuit configured to create heat. For example, a battery or capacitor may be placed in circuit to discharge through a resistor or heater element. A quickly-discharged battery itself may constitute aflameless heat source 130. Another flameless heat source includes solar radiation, which may be harnessed to impart heat energy to volatize a treatment agent. For example, a heat transferring portion of an assembly according to certain principles of the invention may be coated with a substance such as copper oxide (CuO). - As is known, air-activated hand warmers can be made from Iron Fe, Cellulose C6H10O5, Activated carbon C, Water H2O, Polypropylene sack C3H6, Salt NaCl, and Vermiculite (MgFeAl)3(AlSi)4O10(OH)24H2O. Iron and Oxygen react producing heat. Water is the medium in which the Iron and the Oxygen react. Salt is a catalyst through the water speeding up the reaction. Activated carbon acts like charcoal in a BBQ grill and disperses the heat around the hand warmer. Vermiculite insulates the reaction in the hand warmer so it lasts longer. Cellulose takes up space/sometimes replaced with saw dust. Polypropylene sack keeps the moisture within the hand warmer.
- In general, it is within contemplation to use some sort of self-heating chemical system using one or more primary components for exothermic reactions (such as calcium oxide), one or more porous components that can serve as a heat sink and conductor of heat as well as undergoing chemical transformations that release heat (zeolite), a weak acid (citric acid) for sustained modulation of temperature and pH. Exothermic reactions, mixing of some chemicals, sorption of certain chemicals, phase changes in chemicals, and dissolution of some chemicals in solvents release heat during these operations. The rate of heat generation coupled with mass and energy transfer rates to or from system(s) allows modulation of the temperature of systems. The modulation can be further enhanced by controlled release and availability of some of the components. This method provides with a class of self-heating product applications and focuses on the modulation of temperature through sequestering of reactions with different rates, heat release through dissolution, heat release through mixing, heat release through sorption, heat release through phase change as well as controlling mass and heat transfer rates.
- Heat from the
source 130 facilitates volatization of thetreatment fluid 120. Consequently, ahousing 140 may be provided to hold theheat source 130 in operable association with thetreatment fluid 120. Aworkable housing 140 provides an avenue through which vaporized treatment fluid may be broadcast from stored or bulk treatment fluid to the local environment. For example, ahousing 140 may include one or more aperture, generally 145, to permit passage of vapor from inside to outside of the housing. A workable aperture includes a pore in a diffusion membrane, space between fibers in a mat or cloth, window, door, gap, hole, louver, or other opening, and the like. - Sometimes, a
housing 140 may also provide a protective or safety function. In one example, ahousing 140 can be configured to resist access to storedtreatment fluid 120 that is confined inside the housing. For example, ahousing 140 may provide a protective physical barrier to resist placing a portion of anemanator 110 in a child's mouth, or to resist access of a child's tongue to a harmful chemical. Onepreferred housing 140 includes a closure element that resists nondestructive disassembly, and thereby, resists undesired access by a user to any potentially harmful contents inside the housing. -
Assembly 100 may include a removable oropenable gas barrier 150. Agas barrier 150 may operate to resist undesired initiation of an exothermic chemical reaction. Anair barrier 150 may sometimes resist broadcast of vapors of treatment fluid prior to the time that a user places theassembly 100 into operation. Anexemplary gas barrier 150 may be made from a sealed foil or plastic membrane. Location of aworkable barrier 150 may be selected depending on its desired function. In one case, abarrier 150 may protectively envelop only aheat source 130 to restrict ingress of oxygen to an exothermic combination of ingredients. In another case, abarrier 150 may envelop theentire assembly 100, and can even function as packaging for sale. In certain cases, a volume insidebarrier 150 may be evacuated, or filled with an inert gas during manufacture. - A
trigger mechanism 160 may be included in certain embodiments of anassembly 100. When present, atrigger mechanism 160 may be operated to permit or causeflameless heat source 130 to generate heat. Many forms of anoperable trigger mechanism 160 may be envisioned. A firstexemplary trigger mechanism 160 can be constructed to pierce the wall of a container to combine ingredients for an exothermic reaction. A secondexemplary trigger mechanism 160 may be constructed to release treatment fluid from confinement operably to place treatment fluid in contact with a heat source. Sometimes, asafety mechanism 170 may be included to resist undesired operation of atrigger mechanism 160. -
Certain assemblies 100 may include agas generating element 180. A workablegas generating element 180 can be disposed in association withtreatment fluid 120 to facilitate evaporation of the treatment fluid by way of gas flow. Gas generators within contemplation nonexclusively include a fan and chemicals to cause effervescent chemical reactions. - One or more thermally conducting
element 190 may be included in anassembly 100. Desirably, the thermallyconductive element 190 is arranged to facilitate transmission of heat from theheat source 130 to thetreatment fluid 120. A workableheat conducting element 190 includes a metallic element, such as Aluminum foil. Aheat conducting element 190 may also function as a barrier to confine one or more element, fluid, or vapor. In certain embodiments, a thermallyconductive element 190 may be perforated or provide access openings to facilitate transmission of treatment fluid invapor form 135. - In certain cases, an
energized emanator assembly 100 may be constructed to place treatment fluid 120 (and/or sometimes, a constituent material of a heat source), in a solidized form. By “solidized” it is intended to mean that thetreatment fluid 120 is in condition to resist spilling or otherwise leaking from theassembly 100. Free-flowing fluid is distinguished over solidized fluid. Exemplary solidized treatment fluid may be formed by a process including adsorption or uptake of treatment fluid into one or more high surface area material, diffusion or adsorption of treatment fluid into a rubber or rubber-like material, or sufficiently complete absorption of treatment fluid into a substrate. A workable solidized water source includes water-jello or water beads. - Sometimes, an
emanator assembly 100 may include a termination mechanism 210 to stop the enhanced rate of emanation. An exemplary termination mechanism 210 may nonexclusively include: structure configured to permit sealing or resealing part or all of an emanator inside an air-tight envelope; structure configured to permit removal of the volatile fluid from an energizing environment of the emanator; structure configured to stop an exothermic reaction in aheat source 130, and the like. - It is currently preferred to provide an air-
tight barrier element 220 to resist undesired emanation of treatment fluid from anassembly 100. In certain cases, abarrier 220 may function to resist access of oxygen from the atmosphere to combine with one or more material of theassembly 100. In other cases, abarrier 220 may simply confinetreatment vapors 135 inside a volume. Aworkable barrier 220 may also function as unit packaging, including display packaging for sale of anassembly 100. -
Certain embodiments 100 may include a sequestering arrangement, generally 225, for initial isolation of the treatment fluid from operable association with an emanator or heat source. For example,treatment fluid 120 may be stored inassembly 100 separately from anemanator 110. A user may then take action to place the operable ingredients together or create a working combination. - Further, an
embodiment 100 may include a time-delay mechanism, generally 230. It is within contemplation that a time-delay mechanism 230 may function in various useful ways. One way can be to delay peak energization of theassembly 100 for an extended period of time subsequent to placement of the assembly into service and compared to timed energy release rate from a device lacking the delay mechanism. A workable time-delay mechanism 230 can be based on fundamental effect of one or more material properties, or may employ an actual digital, electronic, or mechanical timer. - The
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 2 illustrates principles of operation of certain energized emanator assemblies according to certain principles of the invention.Emanator assembly 100 inFIG. 2 includes apuck 250 that is introduced to acontainer 252 holding afluid source 254. A currently preferred fluid (water)source 254 is in a solidified form, such as water-gelatin, to reduce potential for spills and creation of a mess. Workable solidifiedwater 254 provides source of water that is sufficient to cause an exothermic reaction, and thereby, operate theemanator assembly 100. Apuck 250 may be embodied as a tablet, or other convenient 3-dimensional object, or even in powder form. The composition of anexemplary puck 250 may include sodium bicarbonate, citric acid, and insect repellant. Calcium oxide or chloride chloride may be included in thepuck 250 to generate on-demand heat during operation ofemanator assembly 100. - The
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 3 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention. Thisemanator assembly 100 includes reactant materials, generally indicated at 256, confined inside a ventedcontainer 252.Exemplary reactant materials 256 may include heat-releasing material mixed with high surface area (HSA) material that is infiltrated with one or more treatment fluid.Reactant material 256 may be confined in any convenient manner, and may be embodied in a replaceable or rechargeable cartridge. An exothermic reaction within thereactant material 256 may be caused by exposure of the reactant material to a source of water, including humidity present in a local treatment atmosphere. Volatized treatment fluid invapor phase 135 exits the container through one or more aperture 258. - A
hook 260 exemplifies a structure to conveniently hold theemanator 100 for emanation of treatment fluid invapor form 135 in a local environment. Illustratedhook 260 may be considered as generally representing an element configured to support the apparatus from a cooperating perch. As will be understood, a perch may be embodied as a stick, rod, upstanding plate edge, or other support structure arranged to cooperate with thehook 260. A cooperating hook and perch may function to associate an embodiment with a mobile or stationary local environment. For purpose of this disclosure, a hook specifically encompasses a spring loaded clip, and a perch specifically encompasses an article of clothing or a personal item such as a backpack or purse. Alternative holding or support structure within contemplation includes a simple base to supportassembly 100 on a flat surface, such as a table top. - The
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 4 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention. Thisemanator assembly 100 includescontainer 252 configured as a ventedcage 264 to hold the constituent components, and an air-tight packaging envelope 266 to prevent premature exothermic reaction. - A
workable cage 264 may include louvers, generally 268, or other aperture structure to permit emanation ofvapor 135 from theemanator element 110 to a local environment. Humidity in ambient air may be used in combination with removal of thepackaging envelope 266 as a triggering mechanism to start an exothermic reaction. The illustratedemanator element 110 is directly coupled in thermally operable registration with exothermic material confined inside theheat source 130. Activated thermal material energizes thetreatment fluid 120 that is embedded or dispersed in theemanator 110, and avapor 135 is emanated through alouver 268 to the local atmosphere. - The
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 5 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention. Thisemanator assembly 100 includesexothermic material 274 with treatment fluid dispersed within, loaded into, or uptaken by, the exothermic mixture 274 (or, sometimes the confining envelope 276), of anexothermic heat source 130. Operation ofemanator assemblies 100 inFIGS. 4 and 5 are similar. Operation of theassemblies 100 may be started by simply opening thepackaging envelope 266. Theseassemblies 100 will operate in an energized state until either thetreatment fluid 120 is all evaporated, or the exothermic capability of theheat source 130 is exhausted. - The
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 6 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention. Thisemanator assembly 100 includes a thermally conductive housing 282 (e.g., a metal tube) to initially confinetreatment fluid 120.Housing 282 is disposed in direct contact with aheat source 130 that is embodied as an exothermic patch. The thermallyconductive housing 282 is exemplary of an optionalheat conducting element 190 to transfer heat from the activatedexothermal material 274 into the fluid 120, and thereby enhance emanation of avapor 135 of the fluid 120 into the local environment. - The
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 7 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention. Thisemanator assembly 100 includes an initiating trigger mechanism, generally indicated at 292. Themechanism 292 includes apiercer 294, and asafety arrestor 296.Arrestor 296 resists undesired operation of thepiercer 294.Treatment fluid 120 held influid container 298 is released by user operation of thepiercer 294, and is allowed to contact a portion of theheat source 130.Fluid 120 may sometimes be dispersed into aporous bag 300, and/or may be uptaken in theexothermic material 274. The illustratedheat source 130 is structured similarly to a commercially available hand warmer. After the air-tight packaging 266 is removed,heat source 130 is activated by oxygen present in the air. Heat from thesource 130 energizes the liquid 120, andvapor 135 is transmitted at an enhanced rate throughporous container 252 into the local environment. - The
emanator assembly 100 illustrated inFIG. 8 is substantially similar to that illustrated in FG. 7. A difference is the arrangement of amembrane 302 that initiallyconfines treatment fluid 120. Operation of thetrigger mechanism 292 places released fluid 120 into direct contact withexothermic material 274. - The
emanator assembly 100 illustrated inFIG. 9 includes elements mentioned above, which are numbered accordingly. Thisemanator assembly 100 includes a thermally conductive porous treatment fluid-absorbingjacket 302.Jacket 302 is preloaded with a quantity oftreatment fluid 120. After a user opens air-tight packaging 266, oxygen in the local atmosphere permeates into contact withexothermic material 274, and causes generation of heat.Treatment vapor 135 is consequently emitted through pores orapertures 268 for broadcast into the local environment. - The
emanator assembly 100 illustrated inFIG. 10 includes a fluid-holdingcontainer 308 disposed between first and second 310 and 312, respectively. In one embodiment,exothermic patches container 308 is a thermally conductive tube. An Aluminum tube works well.Treatment fluid 120 is retained inside thecontainer 308 by a porous cap or plug 314.Treatment vapor 135 may pass through theplug 308 to treat the local environment. 310, 312 may be held in operable association withPatches container 308 by an assembly aide, such as a hook-and-loop strap. Activation of 310, 312 by opening the air-thermal patches tight packaging envelope 266 energizes theassembly 100, and emits treatment vapor at an enhanced rate. - The
emanator assembly 100 illustrated inFIG. 11 includes a thermally insulating porous cover orjacket 318 to hold a quantity ofexothermic material 274. Cover 320 holdsexothermic material 274 inside thejacket 318. Opening air-tight seal 266 starts an exothermic chemical reaction, and energizes theassembly 100.Treatment fluid 120 is heated by the exothermic reaction. Consequently,treatment vapor 135 is broadcast throughjacket 318 to the local environment at an enhanced rate. - With reference to
FIG. 12 , another workable rechargeable energizedemanator assembly 100 is disclosed. Saturatedsodium acetate solution 328 confined inside acontainer 330 may be activated to produce an exothermic reaction by a user's operation of an activation mechanism, generally indicated at 334. For example, theactivator slider 336 may be depressed to cause ametal scraper 338 to form nucleation or initiation sites for the saturatedsolution 328 to form crystals and release heat. The temperature may reach 55 degrees C., or so, and can be modulated with chemical attenuators. Heat applied to thetreatment fluid 120 facilitates volatilization of fluid, and causestreatment vapor 135 to migrate through aporous plug 340 to the local atmosphere. - Still with reference to
FIG. 12 , aheat insulating container 330 may facilitate maintaining an elevated temperature in association with thetreatment fluid 120 for an extended period of time. Thesolution 328 may be recharged byheating assembly 100 by a recharging source. Aworkable recharging source 342 includes boiling water, or microwaving thesolution 328 to dissolve the crystals. Subsequently, theassembly 100 is ready for reuse. - The energized
emanator assembly 100 illustrated inFIG. 13 includes a thermally insulatingcontainer 330 arranged to hold a quantity ofexothermic material 274′ that includesexothermic material 274 premixed with a quantity oftreatment fluid 120.Exothermic material 274′ may, for examples, be in powder of block form. Suitable material of construction for acontainer 330 includes ceramic and plastic. - Still with reference to
FIG. 13 ,assembly 100 includes aneffervescent material 350 and awater source 352. A workable effervescent material may include citric acid and sodium bicarbonate. Water obtained fromsource 350 causes a gas-forming reaction, and enhances rate of discharge ofvapor 135 from the discharge port, pore, aperture, orneck 354. A preferred water source resists presence of free water that can spill and make a mess. A workable water source includes an arrangement of water-jello or water beads, or sometimes a water-loaded powder or quantity of high surface area material. A water source may include CMC and water. - The energized
emanator assembly 100 illustrated inFIG. 14 is structured similarly to that illustrated inFIG. 13 . However, inFIG. 14 thecontainer 330 is arranged as a box with anoperable lid 356. - The
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 15 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention. Thisassembly 100 includes an air-activatedexothermic material 274 disposed inside a porous pouch-like container 252. Treatment fluid is combined with high surface area (HSA) material. As illustrated, the HSA material may be provided as a plurality of commercially available substantially roundceramic beads 360. However, HSA material in powder form and other geometric shapes is workable. An exothermic reaction is initiated when a user tears open thepackaging material 266 at time of desired use of theassembly 100. Heat from the exothermic reaction facilitates volatization of treatment fluid dispersed inside the HSA material. Consequently, treatment fluid invapor form 135 is applied to the local environment at an enhanced rate. An advantage of thisassembly 100 is its inherent resistance to fluid spills and resulting mess. - The
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 16 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention. Thisemanator assembly 100 includestreatment fluid 120 that is stored inpocket 362 separately from theexothermic material 274.Pocket 362 is exemplary of asequestering arrangement 225. After the air-tight package 266 is opened by a user, oxygen in the local atmosphere reacts with theexothermic material 274 and the exothermic reaction begins. The user then operates theactuator 294 to rupture themembrane 364, which may release fluid 120 for direct contact with either theexothermic material 274 or another workable emanator. -
FIG. 17 illustrates anassembly 100 including a time-delay mechanism 230 that is constructed to cause energizing activity to begin, or to increase, after a period of time in use. In this case, the rate of emanation of a treatment fluid 10 can be enhanced at that time when its conventional (unenergized) emanation would be inherently reduced. In the illustrated arrangement, a boundary (sponge 370) is provided around a heat-producingmaterial 274. As illustrated,exothermic material 274 is confined inside aporous pouch container 252, which is surrounded bysponge 370. A desired amount oftreatment fluid 120 is dispersed or uptaken intosponge 370. The boundary defined by thesponge 370 resists activation of the heat-producingmaterial 274 until a point in time where the emanation ofvapor 135 from thesponge 370 is normally reduced, and subsequent addition of heat can then beneficially restore rate of emanation ofvapor 135 of an emanating device to a higher (energized and enhanced) level. - One workable boundary element can include walls of cellulose sponge that are impregnated with treatment fluid. Another workable boundary includes encapsulating walls of high surface area material, such as ceramic, which are loaded with treatment fluid. Air may pass through a workable boundary material and into the exothermic mixture after a sufficient amount of
treatment fluid 120 has evaporated, and a path for air ingress opens up. - In the
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 17 , fluid molecules are depleted from the perimeter boundary of the sponge as the device ages (emanates), consequently permitting oxygen to penetrate into contact with and activate the heat-generating material. Produced heat increases emanation of the remaining treatment fluid, and tends to maintain emanation from the device closer to a constant level until the end of its useful life. - The embodiment of
assembly 100 illustrated inFIG. 18 incorporates an energy storage device, generally 372, in-circuit to discharge stored energy and convert that energy to heat. The generated heat is harnessed to volatize a treatment fluid for broadcast of atreatment vapor 135 to a local environment. As illustrated, anenergy storage device 372 such as a battery or capacitor may be placed in circuit through aswitch 374 to aresistor element 376. Theswitch 374 may be closed at a point in time when vapor oftreatment agent 135 is desired in the local environment. In the case of abattery 373, the electrical energy stored in thebattery 373 is converted to heat. Heat may be generated by theresistor 376. When theresistor 376 has a sufficiently low resistance, the battery heats up due to high current draw (e.g., almost a short-circuit), and correspondingly heats up the surroundingcarrier material 378 that holds a quantity oftreatment substance 120. A workablethermal shield 380 may be constructed of polypropylene, or other material with thermal insulating qualities, to ensure generated heat is driven into thetreatment fluid 120. - The
carrier material 378 is desirably disposed for good thermal communication with the energy storing element orheat source 372. Broadly, acarrier material 378 may be considered as an absorber/emitter, because thecarrier material 378 is loaded bytreatment fluid 120 during manufacture of theassembly 100, then emits treatment invapor form 135 during operation of thedevice 100. Workable materials of construction for acarrier material 378 include porous polymers, cotton and other fabric, felt, and the like. - In the
assembly 100 illustrated inFIG. 19 , a fluid-holdingcontainer 252 holds a bulk quantity ofvolatile treatment substance 120 in fluid form and has adiffusion membrane 386 located to be wetted by thetreatment substance 120 under the influence of gravity. Aworkable diffusion membrane 386 may be constructed from nano- or microporous polymer membrane material, including microporous polyethylene. One or moreexothermic material 274 is distributed around a perimeter of thecontainer 252 to provide heat to the container, and thereby enhance evolution ofvapor 135 from the bulk fluid source of treatment vapor. Thisdevice 100 is sometimes configured for placement in an airstream, such as in association with an automobile's air vent or other source of air flow. The airstream also promotes broadcast of a fluid treatment substance invapor form 135 into the local environment. -
FIG. 20 illustrates anembodiment 100 constructed to start an exothermic reaction upon opening of the air-tight package 266. An exemplarythermal material mix 274 may be a dry exothermic mixture of Iron, NaCl, vermiculite and carbon similar to the mix contained in commercially available hand and body warmers. Moisture present in the local atmosphere is typically sufficient to initiate an exothermic reaction. The exothermic reaction may be accelerated by a user actuating the activatingmechanism 294 to allow hydrogen peroxide or water to mix with the powdered dry exothermic mixture. It is recognized that Iron may be substituted by another metal, such as Aluminum, Magnesium, or Calcium. Further, NaCl may be substituted for by NaOCl. The temperature achieved by the exothermic mixture may be adjusted by the addition of water vs hydrogen peroxide, with the latter causing a hotter reaction.Treatment fluid 120 may be loaded into, or uptaken by,container 252, which can be an air permeable bag or other porous housing workable to confine theexothermic material 274. - The energized
assembly 100 illustrated inFIG. 21 includes a water-tight container 252 with internal partitions in which to hold aneffervescent material 392 andwater beads 394 in initial isolation from each other. Treatment fluid may be included in themixture 392.Water beads 394 are commercially available under the name “water beads”, and are compounds including a polymer.Water beads 394 are non-edible beads, made of a combination of water and a water-absorbing polymer. Whendry water beads 394 are immersed in water, they fill up and expand like a sponge. When theeffervescent material 392 contacts thewater beads 394, a slow exothermic reaction begins. The reaction is slowed by the water beads' slow surrender of water to the reaction. - Still with reference to
FIG. 21 ,lid 356 is sufficiently porous to permit off-gas release of treatment vapors. In one workable arrangement,container 252 andlid 356 are connected to confine the mix oftreatment fluid 120 andeffervescent material 392, and are sufficiently flexible to permit twisting of massaging thecontainer 252 to rupturemembrane 396. Aruptured membrane 396 permits themixture 120/392 to contactwater beads 394 and cause an exothermic reaction to energize dispersal oftreatment vapor 135 into the local atmosphere. -
FIG. 22 illustrates anembodiment 100 which includes a thermally conductive cup orcontainer 400 for improved heat transfer from an exemplary hand or body warmer-typeexothermic device 130 into thefluid treatment substance 120. Anexemplary container 400 may be made from metal having good thermal conductivity, such as Aluminum or copper.Treatment substance 120 may sometimes be in solidized form to resist fluid spills and mess. Opening the air-tight package 266 initiates the exothermic reaction, as described variously above. Treatment fluid invapor form 135 may be emitted into the local atmosphere through aporous seal 402. Sometimes, an air-tight seal 402 may be removed, leaving behind a porous membrane or other element to resist spill oftreatment fluid 120 while permitting escape ofvapor 135. - The
embodiment 100 illustrated inFIG. 23 is exemplary of another energized emanator assembly according to certain principles of the invention. Thisemanator assembly 100 includes ahousing 140 configured to hold anemanator element 110. Thehousing 140 has a plurality of spaced-apart rails 404. Preferably,housing 140 is configured, in part, to provide asafety mechanism 170. In this illustration,safety mechanism 170 is to resist contact between a user and a potentially harmful ingredient of the assembly. For example, a gap betweenadjacent rails 404 can be too narrow or small to allow penetration of a child's tongue into the interior of the housing. Also, rails 404 can operate to space a user by a safe distance from contact with a hot portion of theassembly 100. Alid 356 or cap 406 may be configured to fit in permanent engagement over an access opening of the housing subsequent to manufacture assembly. The desirably tamper-proof housing 140 inFIG. 23 can be configured upon assembly (of the cooperating cap 406 onto the housing 140), to resist nondestructive disassembly and unauthorized user access to e.g., theemanator element 110. - A
workable housing 140 may be manufactured by injection molding from an inexpensive plastic material. Sometimes, a housing may be treated to provide, or its constituent material(s) may be inherently of, enhanced biodegradability.Certain housings 140 can form part of anassembly 100 that is regarded as disposable after a single use. For purpose of this disclosure, enhanced biodegradability means decompose in a landfill within 5 years. - With continued reference to
FIG. 23 , the illustrated andpreferred emanator 110 is configured as a conical shell made of paper, or paper-like material, similar to a drinking cup.Emanator element 110 is exemplary of an element that is configured as a shell of revolution about an open core.Treatment fluid 120 may be dispersed into a volume of certain constituent material of theemanator 110. Thattreatment fluid 120 may then migrate toward and volatize at the surface of theemanator element 110 to broadcastvapor 135 to the local environment. - An optional
heat conducting element 190 may be included in theassembly 100 ofFIG. 23 . Aworkable element 190 includes a metal foil, similar to tin foil. Sometimes, and as illustrated, theelement 190 may be perforated. Other times,element 190 may be configured as an uninterrupted membrane, and can form a barrier for fluid migration fromemanator 110 toward an energizingelement 130. - Still with reference to
FIG. 23 , an energizingelement 130 is configured for assembled reception inside the open core ofemanator element 110. A workable energizingelement 130 is operable to facilitate volatizing thetreatment fluid 120 to broadcastvapor 135 from the surface of the emanator. A currently preferred energizingelement 130 includes a flameless mix ofexothermic materials 274 such as described above. Aremovable gas barrier 150 is desirably included in association with the energizingelement 130, in part, to resist undesired propagation of an exothermic reaction. For example,packaging envelope 266 can form a convenient air-tight arrangement to resist unintended actuation of the energizingelement 130. - Like elements in
FIGS. 23 and 24 are generally numbered the same. Theassembly 100 inFIG. 24 includes a differently configuredhousing 140 that includeslegs 410 and anaperture 412.Aperture 412 provides a bottom entrance to achimney 414 extending through theheat source 130.Chimney 414 may be characterized as a void disposed in vertical penetration through an upstanding length of theelongate heat source 130.Aperture 416 extends vertically through cap 406 and provides an upper exit portion of thechimney 414. Cap 406 may also be configured to provide protective rails and apertures, as illustrated inFIG. 24 . - The
heat source 130 inFIG. 24 may be formed by rolling a commercially available hand warmer to make a vertically oriented open-cored cylinder or tube. Sometimes, a reinforcement (e.g., mesh or screen core) may be provided to enforce a desired hollow cylinder shape. The open core provides achimney 414. A vertical draft is caused in thechimney 414 as the hand warmer heats up, and the draft promotes oxygen uptake by the exothermically active chemicals of the hand warmer. Consequently, theheat source 130 can reach significantly higher operating temperatures than seen during their conventional use. - Table 1 below presents experimental data obtained by measuring the surface temperature of a variety of commercially available hand warmers after operation for one hour of exposure to 25° C. still ambient air. Individual hand warmers were removed from their respective packages, and simply suspended from a string in ambient (still) air. The hand warmers were exposed to air on all sides (uninsulated). No attempt was made to change their shape from the conventional “flat” shape as removed from their air-tight packaging. Temperatures were measured by thermocouple and laser thermometer.
-
TABLE 1 Hand warmer characteristic Measured wt. in grams temperature ° C. 36 32 20 29 66 48 156 63 - As noted above, a chimney can increase the operating temperature of a commercially available hand warmer due to increasing oxygen availability for the chemical reaction. The surface temperature of one prototype reached 63° C. after one hour of operation. This prototype included a rolled-up commercially available hand warmer that was wrapped in a foil cylinder, and then wrapped in a cylindrical paper emanator, still air, 25° C. ambient air temperature.
- Dissection of commercially available hand warmers indicates that the bag material used to confine the exothermic mixture of chemicals is nonporous to the naked eye. Further, the material appears to be coated on the inside bag surface, logically reducing the porosity and permeability to oxygen or air. It is believed that a bag or ingredient-housing having low permeability to air is desired to provide a longer time increment for operation at a mild temperature as a hand warmer. In general, hand warmers operate at less than 65° C. to avoid burning the user. In fact, the large 156 g hand warmer in Table 1 is a “super” model, intended for use at extreme low temperatures. Consequently, the hand warmer's surface temperature realized during its conventional use at a lower ambient temperature (where heat is extracted from the hand warmer at a faster rate by the lower temperature) would logically be lower than that measured at room temperature.
- With reference again to
FIG. 24 , certain embodiments may include a bag orhousing 418 made from aporous material 420 to promote availability of oxygen for the exothermic reaction. One suchporous material 420 includes cheese cloth. A workable swath of commercially available hand woven cotton cheese cloth was optically measured to possess about 35 threads per inch (tpi). A humanly perceptible effect can be felt by a test hand's skin on one side of a two-layered 35 tpi cotton cheese cloth bag when blowing perpendicularly through pursed lips at the other side of the cloth stack formed by an empty bag. In contrast, no effect is perceptible by the test hand when substituting the cloth bag for an empty bag from a commercially available hand warmer. Contents of a commercially available 156 g hand warmer were dumped into a hand woven 35 tpi cotton cheese cloth bag, and after one hour of operation in still ambient 25° C. air, the bag surface temperature was 87° C. - Porosity of certain commercially available bags was contrasted to comparably shaped cloth bags using water as a test media. 100 cc of water passed through a hand woven cheese cloth bag in less than 2 seconds. 100 cc of water passed through a machine woven cotton bag (purchased on-line from Amazon) in about 12 seconds. The empty bag from a Thermahand™ hand warmer was also tested with 100 cc of water. After 120 seconds, only a trace amount of moisture was visible on the outer surface of the hand warmer's bag.
- Certain embodiments may include one ore more portion of a
bag 418 that is of enhanced porosity compared to commercially available hand warmers. It is within contemplation that apertures of porous material may be provided in opposite ends of anelongate bag 418 to function cooperatively as a chimney. A draft effect somewhat equivalent to that from a chimney may be provided by an embodiment having abag 418 that is entirely porous. It is further within contemplation that a bag, itself, may provide the volume in which to hold a quantity of treatment agent. A workable bag may be made from porous metal, or metallized fabric. - With reference now to
FIG. 25 , anassembly 100 may include an anode, a cathode, and an electrolyte with one of the anode or cathode being isolated, or the electrolyte being isolated in whole or in part until a user performs a release operation to permit operable combination of the anode, cathode, and electrolyte to cause an exothermic chemical reaction. Certain self-sufficient embodiments carry all of the constituent elements required for combination to cause and sustain an exothermic reaction. Other embodiments may obtain one or more elements from a local environment during operation of the device. - In the preferred configuration illustrated in
FIG. 25 , a fluid element 428 (often, a portion of the required electrolyte) is sequestered insidechamber 430 until a user operatesplunger 432 as a puncturing tool to rupturemembrane 434. Thefluid element 428 can then be mixed with the remainder of theexothermic materials 436 confined inside thermallyconductive housing 282. A ventedcage 264 can resist premature operation of theplunger 432, and provide a safety barrier to resist contact between a user and a hazardous portion of theassembly 100. - An
emanator 438 typically surrounds thehousing 282 to facilitate heat transfer from the confined and reacting exothermic materials to a treatment fluid contained in theemanator 438. Sometimes, the housing includes a portion of metallic construction to facilitate heat transfer. Other times, a separate metallic element may be disposed between thehousing 282 and theemanator 438 to enhance conveyance of heat. Packaging 266 may provide a barrier to resist undesired release of treatment agent into a local environment, or to resist initiation of the exothermic reaction. - Table 2 below lists a few examples of workable combinations of anodes, cathodes, and their cooperating electrolytes. Electrolytes listed in Table 2 are broken down into their salt and a cooperating solvent. Typically, the solvent is the sequestered element. However,
workable embodiments 100 may be constructed wherein the sequestered element may be an anode, a cathode, or the entire electrolyte. -
TABLE 2 Anode Cathode Salt Solvent Zinc MnO2 + Carbon NH4C1 Water Zinc MnO2 + Carbon KOH Water Iron MnO2 + Carbon NaCl Water Zinc MnO2 + Carbon NaOH Water Mg MnO2 + Carbon MgBr Water Zinc Carbon Chromic acid Dilute Sulfuric acid Zinc MnO2 + Carbon KOH Water Lithium MnO2 + Carbon Lithium perchlorate Polypropylene Carbonate Lithium CFx + Carbon Li tetrafluroborate Dimethoxyethane Lithium- MnO2 + Carbon Lithium perchlorate Polypropylene Aluminum Carbonate - An embodiment may be constructed to harness heat released from hot water for use to energize an emanator. A user may heat a quantity of water to, or near, boiling, and associate the heated water with an emanator that carries a treatment agent. For example, an emanator may be wrapped around a metal container. The user may use the container to hold the heated water for transfer of heat from the water to the agent disposed inside the emanator.
- An embodiment according to certain aspects of the instant invention may be encompassed in a method to manufacture a device for dispensing vapor of a treatment agent. One such method includes the step of providing an emanator having a surface area disposed in operable association with a volume. That method further includes the step of disposing a quantity of liquid treatment agent inside the volume to permit emanation of treatment fluid in vapor phase from the surface area. A further step includes disposing a quantity of an exothermic chemical mixture as a heat source in operable association with the volume to apply heat energy to the treatment agent therein to volatize the fluid and cause the enhanced emanation of treatment fluid in vapor phase from the surface. A preferred exothermic reaction is air-activated. Desirably, the quantity is configured and arranged to exothermically react for a period of time in excess of four hours subsequent to exposure to air. A further step may optionally include disposing a metallic thermally conductive element between the emanator and the heat source. A further step includes disposing the emanator, heat source, and conductive element inside of a housing comprising an aperture configured to dispense treatment vapor to a local environment. Sometimes, the housing may be configured to resist unauthorized contact with the emanator. A final step may include disposing the housing inside an air-tight envelope to delay production of heat until a user-selected instance in time.
- While aspects of the invention have been described in particular with reference to certain illustrated embodiments, such is not intended to limit the scope of the invention. The present invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from its spirit or essential characteristics. For one example, one or more element may be extracted from one described or illustrated embodiment and used separately or in combination with one or more element extracted from one or more other described or illustrated embodiment(s), or in combination with other known structure. The described embodiments are to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive. Obvious changes within the capability of one of ordinary skill are encompassed within the present invention. All changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.
Claims (20)
Priority Applications (3)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US17/353,742 US20220168770A1 (en) | 2020-12-02 | 2021-06-21 | Flameless energized emanator |
| PCT/US2021/060145 WO2022119730A1 (en) | 2020-12-02 | 2021-11-19 | Flameless energizer for treatment agent |
| US18/327,857 US20230320339A1 (en) | 2020-12-02 | 2023-06-01 | Flameless energizer for treatment agent |
Applications Claiming Priority (4)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US202063120664P | 2020-12-02 | 2020-12-02 | |
| US202163133686P | 2021-01-04 | 2021-01-04 | |
| US17/322,849 US12151052B2 (en) | 2020-12-02 | 2021-05-17 | Flameless energized emanator |
| US17/353,742 US20220168770A1 (en) | 2020-12-02 | 2021-06-21 | Flameless energized emanator |
Related Parent Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US17/322,849 Continuation-In-Part US12151052B2 (en) | 2020-12-02 | 2021-05-17 | Flameless energized emanator |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US20220168770A1 true US20220168770A1 (en) | 2022-06-02 |
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Family Applications (2)
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|---|---|---|---|
| US17/353,742 Abandoned US20220168770A1 (en) | 2020-12-02 | 2021-06-21 | Flameless energized emanator |
| US18/327,857 Pending US20230320339A1 (en) | 2020-12-02 | 2023-06-01 | Flameless energizer for treatment agent |
Family Applications After (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US18/327,857 Pending US20230320339A1 (en) | 2020-12-02 | 2023-06-01 | Flameless energizer for treatment agent |
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| Country | Link |
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| US (2) | US20220168770A1 (en) |
| WO (1) | WO2022119730A1 (en) |
Cited By (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20240065253A1 (en) * | 2003-06-20 | 2024-02-29 | Wenjie Li | Portable electric heating mosquito repelling apparatus |
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| US20080208162A1 (en) * | 2007-02-26 | 2008-08-28 | Joshi Ashok V | Device and Method For Thermophoretic Fluid Delivery |
| CN105769550A (en) * | 2016-03-08 | 2016-07-20 | 上海中医药大学 | Needle warming moxibustion acupoint patch containing volatile oil clathrate compound |
| US20210186100A1 (en) * | 2017-10-13 | 2021-06-24 | Hauni Maschinenbau Gmbh | Liquid store for an inhaler, in particular for an electronic cigarette product |
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| GB2275608B (en) * | 1993-03-02 | 1997-04-02 | Johnson & Son Inc S C | A tamper-resistant electrically heated vapour dispensing apparatus |
| ES2300589T3 (en) * | 2002-06-06 | 2008-06-16 | S.C. JOHNSON & SON, INC. | VOLATILIZATION OF LOCATED SURFACE. |
| US7138130B2 (en) * | 2003-01-30 | 2006-11-21 | S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc. | Substrate for volatile delivery systems |
| US7841202B2 (en) * | 2003-06-26 | 2010-11-30 | Madan Stephanie N | Heat packages and methods of their use |
| US7892487B2 (en) * | 2006-12-13 | 2011-02-22 | S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc. | Useful life indicators |
| US20100059601A1 (en) * | 2008-09-05 | 2010-03-11 | The Dial Corporation | Energy conserving vapor-dispersing device with optional repeating off cycles |
| US20180000977A1 (en) * | 2016-07-01 | 2018-01-04 | Paul D Mitchell | Method and apparatus for extending the range and effectiveness of evaporative scents |
| US20190124983A1 (en) * | 2017-11-02 | 2019-05-02 | Avail Vapor, LLC | Micro-vaporizer with leak protection |
-
2021
- 2021-06-21 US US17/353,742 patent/US20220168770A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2021-11-19 WO PCT/US2021/060145 patent/WO2022119730A1/en not_active Ceased
-
2023
- 2023-06-01 US US18/327,857 patent/US20230320339A1/en active Pending
Patent Citations (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20080208162A1 (en) * | 2007-02-26 | 2008-08-28 | Joshi Ashok V | Device and Method For Thermophoretic Fluid Delivery |
| CN105769550A (en) * | 2016-03-08 | 2016-07-20 | 上海中医药大学 | Needle warming moxibustion acupoint patch containing volatile oil clathrate compound |
| US20210186100A1 (en) * | 2017-10-13 | 2021-06-24 | Hauni Maschinenbau Gmbh | Liquid store for an inhaler, in particular for an electronic cigarette product |
Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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| US20240065253A1 (en) * | 2003-06-20 | 2024-02-29 | Wenjie Li | Portable electric heating mosquito repelling apparatus |
| US20240423187A1 (en) * | 2023-06-20 | 2024-12-26 | Wenjie Li | Composite multi-effect mosquito prevention and control apparatus |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US20230320339A1 (en) | 2023-10-12 |
| WO2022119730A1 (en) | 2022-06-09 |
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