Device for Chilling Wine
A carafe containing a heat sink that a liquid such as wine may be poured into is disclosed. The heat sink absorbs the thermal energy of the wine, thereby rapidly cooling it. The heat sink is comprised of a series of fins or energy absorbing masses with a surface area of about 30-40 square inches for every 100 ml of liquid contained in the carafe. The heat sink may comprise a single structure or a plurality of structures operating in unison. The operation of said heat sink may be supplemented by a secondary heat sink comprised of the carafe itself. The invention will chill wine that is poured into it at room temperature by about 15-20 F degrees in approximately 1 minute.
The present invention is generally related to devices for lowering the temperature of beverages, and, more particularly, to a device for chilling wine.
CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED INVENTIONSNot applicable.
STATEMENTS AS TO THE RIGHTS TO INVENTIONS MADE UNDER FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENTNot applicable.
REFERENCE TO A “SEQUENCE LISTING,” A TABLE, OR A COMPUTER PROGRAM LISTING APPENDIX SUBMITTED ON A COMPACT DISK.Not applicable.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONMany people enjoy drinking chilled wine. Placing a bottle of wine that is room temperature in a refrigerator or freezer will chill it, but that usually requires waiting 10 minutes or longer. Placing the bottle in a countertop “wine chiller” may be faster, but even currently available electric wine chillers cannot chill the wine to a desirable temperature within one minute.
Other available products can chill small amounts of wine, such as 4 ounces, by a few degrees, but this inventor is unaware of any invention that can chill an entire 750 ml bottle of wine—or even half a bottle—by about 15-20 degrees F. in about one minute. It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a heat sink device capable of chilling one half or an entire standard-sized bottle of wine by about 15 to 20 degrees Fahrenheit in one minute or less.
Currently available devices are not configured or capable of accomplishing the object of the present invention. For example, US D715,143S reveals a “chill rod” that appears substantially similar to the invention described in U.S. Pat. No. 9,802,806 B2, entitled “Apparatus For Dispensing A Fluid From A Container And Regulating A Temperature Thereof”
Indeed, the concept of a “Chill Rod” inserted into a bottle has long been known, as disclosed by the following US utility and design patents. Utility: U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,502,981; 5,732,567; 6,103,280; 6,584,800 B1; 6,751,982 B2; 7,082,784 B2; 7,614,512 B2; 7,802,446 B2; 7,810,348 B2; 7,997,099 B2; 8,051,674 B2; Design: D478,511 S; D621,660 S; D634,158 S; D682,691 S.
Additionally, the prior art also includes cold tubular heat exchangers into which a liquid may be poured. These reduce the temperature of said liquid as it passes through the cold tube. Three such inventions are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,599,872, 5,031,831 and 8,066,152 B2, but none of these reveal a carafe containing a heat sink similar to the instant invention.
The prior art in the field of heat sinks reveals many designs that operate in ambient air, such as the following U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,625,021 B1; 6,226,184 B1; 5,162,974; 5,464,054; and 4,899,210, but these inventions are not configured to be immersed in a drinkable liquid or to lower the temperature of said liquid.
Some heat sinks can lower the temperature of liquids or work with them, such as U.S. Pat. No. 7,149,087 B2, entitled “Liquid Cooled Heat Sink With Cold Plate Retention Mechanism,” or U.S. Pat. No. 7,219,714 B1, whose title reveals a “liquid pump heat sink,” but these heat sinks are not configured to be immersed into or to cool a drinkable liquid.
This inventor is unaware of any prior art revealing a carafe containing a heat sink into which a room temperature drinkable liquid may be poured, resulting in all of the liquid in the carafe being chilled by about 15-20 degrees Fahrenheit in about one minute. Nor does the prior art recognize that to accomplish this result the surface area of the heat sink or heat sinks making contact with the liquid must total about 30-40 square inches for every 100 ml of liquid desired to be chilled in this fashion. To accomplish this result the present invention takes into account
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- (1) The configuration of the primary heat sink inside the carafe, which must be designed to maximize its potential surface area versus its mass.
- (2) The material composition of the carafe, such glass or metal, which can operate as a secondary heat sink, versus plastic, which is not a good heat sink.
- (3) The configuration of the carafe, which must allow (a) the insertion therein of a primary heat sink with a high surface area to mass ratio, and (b) physical contact between the wine and substantially all of the surface area of the primary heat sink in the carafe.
- (4) The total heat sink surface area in relation to the total quantity of wine in the carafe, which surface area shall be 30-40 square inches per 100 ml of wine.
A device for chilling wine, according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, may comprise a carafe which may operate as a secondary heat sink and a primary heat sink positioned inside the carafe. The carafe may be glass, plastic or any other suitable material known to those experienced in the art of making carafes that hold drinkable liquids. The carafe need only be a simple single wall vessel, such as that shown in US D874,862 S. If comprised of metal or glass, the carafe itself may operate as a secondary heat sink, along with the primary heat sink contained in the carafe.
The primary heat sink inside the carafe may be made out of metal, such as aluminum or stainless steel, that is suitable for contact with food or drink. Such metals are well known to those experienced in the art of making food containers. The primary heat sink may also be frozen water encased in a thin layer of plastic. The primary heat sink may be a single structure or a series of unattached structures operating in unison, as shown in the figures herein. The carafe itself may also operate as a secondary heat sink if it is comprised of metal or glass or some other material that can absorb heat well and quickly. The surface area of the heat sink(s) will total about 30-40 square inches per 100 ml of wine intended to be poured into the carafe to its fill line.
The primary heat sink may be stored in a typical household freezer and inserted into the carafe prior to wine being poured therein. Alternatively, where the carafe itself operates as a secondary heat sink the entire invention may be stored in a freezer. As an example, if the fill line of the carafe is meant to hold about 400 ml of wine, which is a little more than one half of a typical wine bottle, the total heat sink surface area making contact with the wine will be about 120-160 square inches. That will chill all of the room temperature wine poured into the carafe by about 15-20 degrees Fahrenheit in about one minute.
Similar to the embodiments illustrated in
For example, in one embodiment of the present invention, carafe 805 may be a secondary heat sink manufactured from glass and have an interior diameter of about 3.2 inches. Heat sink 810 may comprise 18 cubes of frozen water encapsulated in plastic, each having a surface area of 6 square inches, yielding a total surface area of 108 square inches across all units 810. Fill line 815 may designate a volume of 500 ml of wine or other liquid within carafe 805 when units 810 are positioned therein, and may be positioned at a height of about 5.5 inches from the base of carafe 805. In such an embodiment, the surface area of the inner surface of carafe 805 below fill line 815 that makes contact with a wine or other liquid therein is about 63 square inches (i.e., about 55 square inches from the side of carafe 805, and 8 square inches from the base). Thus, the total surface area of the inner surface of carafe 805 below fill line 815 and the surface area of the 18 units 810 making contact with the wine or other liquid within carafe 805 is about 168 square inches. The ratio of surface area to wine or other liquid below fill line 815 is thus 33.6 square inches of contact area.
To operate embodiments of the present invention comprising a carafe configured to receive a heat sink, the heat sink is placed in a household freezer for several hours, preferably overnight. The heat sink is removed from the freezer immediately before the wine or other liquid is sought to be chilled. The heat sink is then placed inside the carafe and the wine or other liquid is poured therein. In certain embodiments, said heat sink may be further configured to aerate said wine as it is poured into the carafe. Assuming the wine is room temperature, the heat sink may be configured such that in about one minute the temperature of wine in the carafe will be reduced by about 15-20 degrees and may be served as chilled wine. In other embodiments of the present invention where the carafe is made from glass, metal, or other such material capable of absorbing thermal energy, wherein the carafe is configured to be a secondary heat sink, both the primary heat sink and the carafe may be stored together in a household freezer prior to use.
While the embodiments of the present invention are described herein with reference to various implementations and exploitations, it will be understood that these embodiments are illustrative and that the scope of the invention(s) is not limited to them. In general, embodiments of a device for chilling wine as described herein may be implemented using methods, facilities, devices, and materials consistent with any appropriate structure as described or illustrated herein. Many variations, modifications, additions, and improvements are possible.
For example, plural instances may be provided for components, operations, or structures described herein as a single instance. Boundaries between various components, operations, and functionality are depicted somewhat arbitrarily, and particular operations are illustrated within the context of specific illustrative configurations. In general, structures and actions presented as separate components or steps in the exemplary configurations may be implemented as a combined structure or step. Similarly, structures and actions presented as a single component or step may be implemented as separate components or steps. These and other variations, modifications, additions, and improvements may fall within the scope of the inventive subj ect matter.
Claims
1. A device for chilling wine, comprising:
- a carafe configured to receive a heat sink and having a volume, and
- a heat sink having a surface area;
- wherein said heat sink is positioned inside said carafe and occupies a portion of the volume of said carafe such that said carafe has a remaining volume configured to receive a liquid; and
- wherein the ratio of the surface area of said heat sink to the remaining volume is from about 30 square inches per 100 milliliters to about 40 square inches per 100 milliliters.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein said heat sink further comprises:
- a circular base having a top side and a bottom side,
- a plurality of plates, each of which has a top end and a bottom end, and
- a plurality of channels;
- wherein the bottom end of each of the plurality of plates is joined to the top side of said circular base;
- wherein each of the plurality of plates is vertically parallel to the remaining plates;
- wherein each of said plurality of channels is positioned between two of the plurality of plates;
- wherein the combination of the plurality of plates and the plurality of channels has the shape of a cylinder; and
- wherein said heat sink is positioned within said carafe with said bottom side facing down.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein said heat sink is manufactured from one of aluminum and stainless steel.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein said heat sink further comprises:
- a circular base having a top side and a bottom side,
- a plurality of circular disks, each of which has a concentric opening,
- a central member passing through the concentric opening of each of the plurality of circular disks and having a top end and a bottom end, and
- a plurality of channels;
- wherein the bottom end of said central member is joined to the top side of said circular base;
- wherein each of the plurality of plates is horizontally parallel to the remaining disks;
- wherein each of said plurality of channels is positioned between two of the plurality of disks;
- wherein the combination of the plurality of disks, the plurality of channels, and the central member has the shape of a cylinder; and
- wherein said heat sink is positioned within said carafe with said bottom side facing down.
5. The device of claim 4, wherein said heat sink is manufactured from one of aluminum and stainless steel.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein said heat sink further comprises:
- a circular base having a top side and a bottom side,
- a plurality of fins, each having a proximal end and a distal end;
- a central member having a top end and a bottom end, and
- a plurality of channels;
- wherein the bottom end of said central member is joined to the top side of said circular base;
- wherein the proximal end of each of the plurality of fins joined to the central member;
- wherein each of said plurality of channels is positioned between two of the plurality of fins;
- wherein the combination of the plurality of fins, the plurality of channels, and the central member has the shape of a cylinder; and
- wherein said heat sink is positioned within said carafe with said bottom side facing down.
7. The device of claim 6, wherein said heat sink is manufactured from one of aluminum and stainless steel.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein said heat sink further comprises a plurality of units, each of said units having a shape and configured to absorb thermal energy; and
- wherein said shape is one of a cube, a sphere, a triangular prism, and a triangular pyramid.
9. The device of claim 8, wherein each of said plurality of units is manufactured from one of aluminum and stainless steel.
10. The device of claim 8, where each of said plurality of units further comprises a volume of water encapsulated within a layer of plastic.
11. A device for chilling wine, comprising:
- a carafe configured to receive a primary heat sink and having a volume an outer surface, an inner surface, and a fill line, and
- a primary heat sink having a surface area;
- wherein said primary heat sink is positioned inside said carafe and occupies a portion of the volume of said carafe such that said carafe has a remaining volume configured to receive a liquid;
- wherein said fill line indicates the height of said remaining volume within said carafe;
- wherein said carafe is manufactured from glass, metal, or other such material capable of absorbing thermal energy such that said carafe acts as a secondary heat sink having an inner surface from the base of said carafe up to said fill line;
- wherein the ratio of the sum of the surface areas of said inner surface and said primary heat sink to said remaining volume is from about 30 square inches per 100 milliliters to about 40 square inches per 100 milliliters.
12. The device of claim 11, wherein said heat sink further comprises a plurality of units, each of said units having a shape and configured to absorb thermal energy; and
- wherein said shape is one of a cube, a sphere, a triangular prism, and a triangular pyramid.
13. The device of claim 12, wherein each of said plurality of units is manufactured from one of aluminum and stainless steel.
Type: Application
Filed: Nov 11, 2021
Publication Date: May 11, 2023
Inventor: Michael Weinberger (Metairie, LA)
Application Number: 17/524,593