Patent application title:

OVEN APPLIANCE WITH AIRFLOW DEFLECTION

Publication number:

US20250305683A1

Publication date:
Application number:

18/618,423

Filed date:

2024-03-27

Smart Summary: An oven has a special design that includes a cooking area for food. This cooking area is surrounded by walls, including a bottom and sides. There are sliding rails on both sides to help place food inside easily. Below the cooking area, there is a heating chamber with a heating element to cook the food. Additionally, air deflectors can be added to the back wall of the cooking area to improve airflow while cooking. 🚀 TL;DR

Abstract:

An oven appliance includes a cabinet and a cooking chamber within the cabinet for receipt of food items for cooking. The cooking chamber is delineated by a plurality of walls including a bottom wall, a left side wall, a right side wall, and a back wall. A plurality of sliding rails extend in pairs from each of the left side wall and the right side wall. A heating chamber is defined below the cooking chamber. A heating element is positioned within the heating chamber. A plurality of air deflectors are positioned within the cooking chamber. The plurality of air deflectors are one of permanently or removably mountable on the back wall of the cooking chamber.

Inventors:

Applicant:

Interested in similar patents?

Get notified when new applications in this technology area are published.

Classification:

F24C15/325 »  CPC main

Details; Arrangements of ducts for hot gases, e.g. in or around baking ovens with forced circulation electrically-heated

F24C15/007 »  CPC further

Details Removable panels

F24C15/16 »  CPC further

Details Shelves, racks or trays inside ovens; Supports therefor

F24C15/32 IPC

Details Arrangements of ducts for hot gases, e.g. in or around baking ovens

F24C15/00 IPC

Details

Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The subject matter of the present disclosure relates generally to an oven appliance, such as a full-size oven appliance or range appliance, and more specifically to airflow within an oven appliance.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Oven appliances generally include a cabinet that defines a cooking chamber for cooking food items therein, such as by baking or broiling the food items. To heat the cooking chamber for cooking, oven appliances include one or more heating elements positioned at a top portion, a bottom portion, or both the top portion and the bottom portion of the cooking chamber. Some oven appliances also include a convection heating element and fan for convection cooking cycles in addition to a main heating element. The main heating element or elements may be used for various cycles of the oven appliance, such as a preheat cycle, a cooking cycle, or a self-cleaning cycle.

When operating oven appliance to cook food items, multiple racks containing food items and cookware thereon may be present in the cooking chamber. When multiple racks are being used, airflow within oven appliance may become restricted, hindering the operation of the oven appliance, and potentially resulting in poor, or undercooked food items. Accordingly, an oven appliance with systems for improved airflow would be desirable.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Aspects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in part in the following description, may be apparent from the description, or may be learned through practice of the invention.

In one example embodiment, an oven appliance is provided. The oven appliance defines a vertical direction, a lateral direction, and a transverse direction. The vertical direction, lateral direction, and transverse direction are mutually perpendicular. The oven appliance includes a cabinet and a cooking chamber within the cabinet for receipt of food items for cooking. The cooking chamber is delineated by a plurality of walls including a bottom wall, a left side wall, a right side wall, and a back wall. A plurality of sliding rails extend in pairs from each of the left side wall and the right side wall. Each pair of sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails is configured to hold a baking rack. A heating chamber is defined below the bottom wall of the cooking chamber. A bottom surface of the bottom wall of the cooking chamber defines an uppermost boundary of the heating chamber. A heating element is positioned within the heating chamber. A fan is positioned at a back side of the heating chamber. The fan is configured to pull air through the heating chamber and into the cooking chamber. A plurality of air deflectors are positioned within the cooking chamber. The plurality of air deflectors are one of permanently or removably mountable on the back wall of the cooking chamber. A controller is positioned within the cabinet. The controller is in operative communication with the heating element and the fan.

In another example embodiment, an oven appliance is provided. The oven appliance defines a vertical direction, a lateral direction, and a transverse direction. The vertical direction, lateral direction, and transverse direction are mutually perpendicular. The oven appliance includes a cabinet and a cooking chamber within the cabinet for receipt of food items for cooking. The cooking chamber is delineated by a plurality of walls including a bottom wall, a left side wall, a right side wall, and a back wall. A plurality of sliding rails extend in pairs from each of the left side wall and the right side wall. Each pair of sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails is configured to hold a baking rack. A heating chamber is defined below the cooking chamber. A heating element is positioned within the heating chamber. An air deflector is positioned within the cooking chamber. The air deflector is one of permanently or removably mountable on the back wall of the cooking chamber.

These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following description and appended claims. The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

A full and enabling disclosure of the present invention, including the best mode thereof, directed to one of ordinary skill in the art, is set forth in the specification, which makes reference to the appended figures.

FIG. 1 provides a front view of an example oven appliance according to one or more embodiments of the present subject matter.

FIG. 2 provides a side section view of the oven appliance of FIG. 1 according to aspects of the present disclosure.

FIG. 3 provides a side section view of an example oven appliance according to aspects of the present disclosure.

FIG. 4 provides a front section view of the example oven appliance of FIG. 3.

Repeat use of reference characters in the present specification and drawings is intended to represent the same or analogous features or elements of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Reference now will be made in detail to embodiments of the invention, one or more examples of which are illustrated in the drawings. Each example is provided by way of explanation of the invention, not limitation of the invention. In fact, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations may be made in the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. For instance, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment may be used with another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment. Thus, it is intended that the present invention covers such modifications and variations as come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.

As used herein, terms of approximation, such as “generally,” or “about” include values within ten percent greater or less than the stated value. In the context of an angle or direction, such terms include values within ten degrees of the stated direction. For example, “generally vertical” includes directions within ten degrees of vertical in any direction, e.g., clockwise or counter-clockwise.

FIGS. 1-4 illustrate an oven appliance 100 according to an example embodiment of the present subject matter. Oven appliance 100 includes an insulated cabinet 102 which defines a vertical direction V, a lateral direction L, and a transverse direction T. The vertical, lateral, and transverse directions V, L, and T are mutually perpendicular and form an orthogonal direction system. Cabinet 102 extends between a top portion 40 and a bottom portion 42 along the vertical direction V. Cabinet 102 extends between a left side 44 and a right side 46 along the lateral direction L and between a front portion 48 and a back portion 50 along the transverse direction T.

The present example embodiment of oven appliance 100 includes cabinet 102 with an interior cooking chamber 104 defined by a top wall 112, a floor 114, a back wall 116, and a pair of opposing side walls, e.g., a left side wall 118 and a right side wall 119 (FIG. 4). Cooking chamber 104 is configured for the receipt of one or more food items to be cooked. Oven appliance 100 includes a door 108 pivotally mounted to cabinet 102 at the opening 106 of cabinet 102 to permit selective access to cooking chamber 104 through opening 106. A handle 110 is mounted to door 108 and assists a user with opening and closing door 108. For example, a user may pull on handle 110 to open or close door 108 and access cooking chamber 104.

Oven appliance 100 may include a seal (not shown) between door 108 and cabinet 102 that may assist with maintaining heat and cooking vapors within cooking chamber 104 when door 108 is closed as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2. Multiple parallel glass panes 122 may provide for viewing contents of cooking chamber 104 when door 108 is closed and may assist with insulating cooking chamber 104. Baking racks 142 may generally be positioned in cooking chamber 104 for the receipt of food items or utensils containing food items. Baking racks 142 may be slidably received onto embossed ribs or sliding rails, such as sliding rails of a plurality of sliding rails 144, such that the racks may be conveniently moved into and out of cooking chamber 104 when door 108 is open. In general, the plurality of sliding rails 144 may extend in pairs from each wall of the pair of opposing sidewalls 118 and 119, e.g., from left side 44 and right side 46. Particularly, each pair of sliding rails 144 may be configured to hold baking rack 142.

One heating element may be included within cabinet 102 to provide heat to cooking chamber 104 for cooking. Such heating element may be gas or electric. For example, in the embodiment shown in FIG. 2, oven appliance 100 includes an electric resistance heating element 124 in a heating chamber 206 below floor 114 of cooking chamber 104. While provided in the present example embodiment as an electric resistance element, a person having ordinary skill in the art would understand that heating element 124 may, in other example embodiments, be a gas burner type of element. In general, heating chamber 206 may be an open space beneath floor 114 where heating element 124 may be disposed and in thermal communication with cooking chamber 104. For example, heating chamber 206 may define an inlet 210 through floor 114 for permitting airflow through heating chamber 206 and across heating element 124. In particular, inlet 210 be positioned proximate a front side 207 of heating chamber 206, or in other example embodiments inlet 210 be positioned proximate one or more of left side 44, right side 46, and front side 207. For example, inlet 210 may be positioned proximate front side 207, or positioned proximate left side 44 and right side 46 (such as two individual inlets 210 proximate the left and right side), or proximate left side 44, right side 46, and front side 207 (such as three individual inlets 210 respectively proximate to the left, right, and front side). In general, outlet may be positioned proximate a back side 209 of heating chamber 206. Furthermore, outlet 212 at back side 209 of heating chamber 206 may be positioned proximate, back wall 116 of cooking chamber 104, e.g., adjacent to back wall 116 or otherwise closer to back wall 116 than to door 108, such that air ejected from outlet 212 impinges on back wall 116 and rises vertically, in the vertical direction V, along back wall 116 of cooking chamber 104. For example, some example embodiments may include air heated by heating element 124 emanating from outlet 212 along back wall 116 of cooking chamber 104. In general, heating chamber 206 may include a venturi-like portion extending downwards in the vertical direction V between inlet 210 and outlet 212, e.g., heating chamber 206 may be wider near inlet 210, narrowing in the middle, and widening again leading up to outlet 212. The venturi-like portion may increase airflow velocity by compressing air flowing between inlet 210 and outlet 212.

In the illustrated example embodiment, oven appliance 100 also has a convection fan 138 positioned at back side 209 of heating chamber 206 and adjacent back wall 116 of cooking chamber 104. In general, convection fan 138 may be configured to pull air directly through heating chamber 206 and into cooking chamber 104. For example, convection fan 138 may be configured to pull air through inlet 210 of heating chamber 206, pull air across heating element 124, and force air out of outlet 212. Convection fan 138 may generally be powered by a convection fan motor 139. Further, convection fan 138 may be a variable speed fan-meaning the speed of fan 138 may be controlled or set anywhere between and including, e.g., zero and one hundred percent (0%-100%). In certain embodiments, oven appliance 100 may also include a bidirectional triode thyristor (not shown), i.e., a triode for alternating current (TRIAC), to regulate the operation of convection fan 138 such that the speed of fan 138 may be adjusted during operation of oven appliance 100. The speed of convection fan 138 may be determined by controller 140. In addition, a sensor 137 such as, e.g., a rotary encoder, a Hall effect sensor, or the like, may be included at the base of fan 138, for example, between fan 138 and motor 139 as shown in the example embodiment of FIG. 2, to sense the speed of fan 138. The speed of fan 138 may be measured in, e.g., revolutions per minute (“RPM”). In some example embodiments, convection fan 138 may operate in an air fry mode. In particular, air fry mode may force heated air over a baking rack 142 in cooking chamber 104. In some example embodiments, sensor 137, convection fan 138 and motor 139 may be omitted altogether.

Oven appliance 100 may generally include a user interface 128 having a display 130 positioned on an interface panel 132 and having a variety of controls 134. Interface 128 allows the user to select various options for the operation of oven appliance 100 including, e.g., various cooking and cleaning cycles. Operation of oven appliance 100 may be regulated by a controller 140 that is operatively coupled to, i.e., in operative communication with, user interface 128, heating element 124, and convection fan 138, as well as other components of oven appliance 100.

For example, in response to user manipulation of the user interface 128, controller 140 may operate heating element 124. Controller 140 may receive measurements from one or more temperature sensors, such as a temperature sensor 202. Controller 140 may also provide information such as a status indicator, e.g., a temperature indication, to the user with display 130. Controller 140 may also be provided with other features as will be further described herein.

Controller 140 may include a memory and one or more processing devices such as microprocessors, CPUs, or the like, such as general or special purpose microprocessors operable to execute programming instructions or micro-control code associated with operation of oven appliance 100. The memory may represent random access memory such as DRAM or read only memory such as ROM or FLASH. In one embodiment, the processor executes programming instructions stored in memory. The memory may be a separate component from the processor or may be included onboard within the processor. The memory may store information accessible by the processor(s), including instructions that may be executed by processor(s). For example, the instructions may be software or any set of instructions that when executed by the processor(s), cause the processor(s) to perform operations. For the embodiment depicted, the instructions may include a software package configured to operate the system, e.g., to execute example methods of operating the oven appliance 100. Controller 140 may also be or include the capabilities of either a proportional (P), proportional-integral (PI), or proportional-integral-derivative (PID) control for feedback-based control implemented with, e.g., temperature feedback from one or more sensors such as temperature sensors and/or probes, etc.

Controller 140 may be positioned in a variety of locations throughout oven appliance 100. In the illustrated embodiment, controller 140 is located next to user interface 128 within interface panel 132. In other embodiments, controller 140 may be located under or next to the user interface 128, otherwise within interface panel 132, or at any other appropriate location with respect to oven appliance 100. Generally, controller 140 may be positioned within cabinet 102. In the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 1, input/output (“I/O”) signals are routed between controller 140 and various operational components of oven appliance 100 such as heating element 124, convection fan 138, controls 134, display 130, alarms, and/or other components as may be provided. In one embodiment, user interface 128 may represent a general purpose I/O (“GPIO”) device or functional block.

Although shown with touch type controls 134 in FIG. 1, it should be understood that controls 134 and the configuration of oven appliance 100 shown in FIG. 1 is provided by way of example only. More specifically, user interface 128 may include various input components, such as one or more of a variety of electrical, mechanical, or electro-mechanical input devices including rotary dials, push buttons, and touch pads, e.g., such as a knob as illustrated in FIG. 2, among other possible examples and combinations. User interface 128 may include other display components, such as a digital or analog display device designed to provide operational feedback to a user. User interface 128 may be in communication with controller 140 via one or more signal lines or shared communication busses.

While oven appliance 100 is shown as a wall oven, the present invention could also be used with other cooking appliances such as, e.g., a stand-alone oven, an oven with a stove-top, or other configurations of such ovens. Numerous variations in the oven configuration are possible within the scope of the present subject matter. For example, variations in the type and/or layout of the controls 134, as mentioned above, are possible. As another example, the oven appliance 100 may include multiple doors 108 instead of or in addition to the single door 108 illustrated. Such examples include a dual cavity oven, a French door oven, and others. The examples described herein are provided by way of illustration only and without limitation.

Referring now to FIG. 2, oven appliance 100 may operate selectable heating modes, such as a bake mode and a convection mode. In general, a user may interact with controls 134, or display 130, of user interface 128 to select the desired heating mode. In the present example embodiment, heating element 124 is provided as a sole heating element in oven appliance 100. As such, heating element 124 may be used in both heating modes described hereinbelow.

In one example, oven appliance 100 may operate in the bake mode. In general, the bake mode may include operating heating element 124 in order to heat the air inside cooking chamber 104. The bake mode may generally provide indirect, dry heat to cooking chamber 104. Accordingly, fan 138 may be inactive, or not spinning, and heated air inside oven appliance 100 may naturally, e.g., gradually, rise and increase cooking chamber 104 temperature. In other words, the bake mode may be a heating mode with natural convection currents.

In another example, oven appliance 100 may operate in the convection mode. In general, the convection mode may include operating heating element 124 and convection fan 138 in order to force heated air from heating chamber 206 into and through cooking chamber 104, as indicated by airflow indicators 1000. Accordingly, in the convection mode, convection fan 138 is active, e.g., spinning, in order to pull air through heating chamber 206 and into cooking chamber 104. In other words, the convection mode may be a heating mode with forced convection currents. The convection mode as described herein may otherwise be referred to as a true convection mode, as air indicated by airflow indicators 1000 may be pre-heated by heating element 124 before being forced into cooking chamber 104.

Turning to FIG. 4, illustrated is an example embodiment of oven appliance 100 with a plurality of air deflectors 300 positioned in cooking chamber 104. In general, each air deflector of the plurality of air deflectors 300 may be rectangular in shape extending in the lateral direction L between the pair of opposing side walls 118 of cooking chamber 104. In general, the plurality of air deflectors 300 may be one of permanently or removably mountable to back wall 116 of cooking chamber 104. For example, the plurality of air deflectors 300 may mount to back wall via one of dowels (not shown), hooks/slots (not shown), or other fastening methods such as screws, bolts (not shown), or may be welded. In general, each air deflector of the plurality of air deflectors 300 may removably mount on back wall 116 of cooking chamber 104 such that air may be deflected, in the transverse direction T, away from back wall 116 and may continue rising in the vertical direction V along back wall 116 of cooking chamber 104.

For example, a first air deflector 302 of the plurality of air deflectors 300 may be positioned in the vertical direction V between a respective pair of sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails 144. First air deflector 302 may be positioned on back wall 116 of cooking chamber 104 to intercept airflow 1000 from heating chamber 206. Airflow 1000 may be divided by first air deflector 302 into a split airflow 1001 and a deflected airflow 1002. In particular, split airflow 1001 may continue rising in the vertical direction V past first air deflector 302 and deflected airflow 1002 may be deflected in the transverse direction between two respective baking racks 142, e.g., shown in FIG. 3 as a bottom baking rack 141 and a middle baking rack 143. A person having ordinary skill in the art would understand and recognize that any suitable amount of baking racks 142 and air deflectors 300 may be present in oven appliance 100 and that the baking racks 142 and air deflectors 300 of FIG. 3 are provided by way of example purposes only and are not intended to be limiting to any certain number or configuration.

Moreover, a second air deflector 304 of the plurality of air deflectors 300 may be positioned in the vertical direction between another respective pair of sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails 144, shown in FIG. 3 as holding a middle baking rack 143 and a top baking rack 145. Second air deflector 304 may be positioned on back wall 116 of cooking chamber 104 to intercept split airflow 1001 from first air deflector 302. Split airflow 1001 may be divided by second air deflector 304 into a split airflow 1003 and a deflected airflow 1004. In particular, split airflow 1003 may continue rising in the vertical direction V past second air deflector 304 and deflected airflow 1004 may be deflected in the transverse direction between the two respective baking racks 142, middle baking rack 143 and top baking rack 145.

In general, each air deflector of the plurality of air deflectors 300 may be positioned at an angle, such as an angle α, in order to control how much air divides between the split airflow and the deflected airflow. For example, angle α may be between zero degrees) (0° and seventy degrees) (70°, such as between zero degrees) (0° and fifty-five degrees) (55°, such as between zero degrees) (0° and forty degrees) (40° from the transverse direction T towards the upward vertical direction V. In an example scenario, assuming one hundred percent (100%) of airflow 1000 flows to first air deflector 302 and depending on angle α of first air deflector 302, split airflow 1001 may, for example, be fifty-five percent (55%) of airflow 1000, and deflected airflow 1002 may be forty-five percent (45%) of airflow 1000. Likewise, continuing the example scenario, assuming one hundred percent (100%) of split airflow 1001 flows to second air deflector 304 and depending on angle α of second air deflector 304, split airflow 1003 may, for example, be twenty percent (20%) of airflow 1001, and deflected airflow 1004 may be eighty percent (80%) of airflow 1001. While described in the present example embodiment with the provided ratios of airflow, a person having ordinary skill in the art would understand the airflow percentages are provided by way of example purposes only and are not intended to be limiting to any certain orientation or configuration.

As described above, the plurality of air deflectors 300 may be generally configured to feed heated air emanating from outlet 212 of heating chamber 206 between baking racks 142 in cooking chamber 104. As such, oven appliance 100 with the plurality of air deflectors 300 may advantageously improve baking performance when multiple baking racks 142 are being used, and additionally may advantageously improve the air fry mode of the oven appliance by controlling the airflow to deflected toward a desired position within cooking chamber 104, such as middle baking rack 143.

As may be seen from the above, provided is an oven appliance with an air deflection system for conveying heated air between multiple baking racks. The oven appliance may include a bottom mounted convection fan mounted in order to feed a stream of air toward air deflector(s) for deflecting the air between the various rack positions. The air deflector(s) may be mounted on the back wall of the oven appliance in order to direct the convection air between the various baking racks.

This written description uses examples to disclose the invention, including the best mode, and also to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the invention, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they include structural elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims or if they include equivalent structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal language of the claims.

Claims

What is claimed is:

1. An oven appliance defining a vertical direction, a lateral direction, and a transverse direction, the vertical direction, lateral direction, and transverse direction mutually perpendicular, the oven appliance comprising:

a cabinet;

a cooking chamber defined within the cabinet for receipt of food items for cooking, the cooking chamber delineated by a plurality of walls including a bottom wall, a left side wall, a right side wall, and a back wall;

a plurality of sliding rails extending in pairs from each of the left side wall and the right side wall, each pair of sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails configured to hold a baking rack;

a heating chamber defined below the bottom wall of the cooking chamber, wherein a bottom surface of the bottom wall of the cooking chamber defines an uppermost boundary of the heating chamber;

a heating element positioned within the heating chamber;

a fan positioned at a back side of the heating chamber, the fan configured to pull air through the heating chamber and into the cooking chamber; and

a plurality of air deflectors positioned within the cooking chamber, the plurality of air deflectors one of permanently or removably mountable on the back wall of the cooking chamber.

2. The oven appliance of claim 1, wherein the heating chamber comprises an inlet proximate one or more of a front side, the left side wall, and the right side wall of the heating chamber.

3. The oven appliance of claim 2, wherein the heating chamber comprises an outlet at the back side of the heating chamber, the fan configured to pull air through the inlet, across the heating element, and out of the outlet.

4. The oven appliance of claim 3, wherein the outlet at the back side of the heating chamber is positioned proximate the back wall of the cooking chamber such that air ejected from the outlet impinges on the back wall of the cooking chamber and rises vertically along the back wall of the cooking chamber.

5. The oven appliance of claim 4, wherein each air deflector of the plurality of air deflectors is positioned on the back wall of the cooking chamber such that air may be deflected in the transverse direction away from the back wall of the cooking chamber and continue rising in the vertical direction away from the bottom wall of the cooking chamber.

6. The oven appliance of claim 1, wherein each air deflector of the plurality of air deflectors is positioned at an angle between zero degrees and seventy degrees from the transverse direction towards an upward vertical direction.

7. The oven appliance of claim 1, further comprising a first air deflector of the plurality of air deflectors positioned in the vertical direction between sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails.

8. The oven appliance of claim 7, further comprising a second air deflector of the plurality of air deflectors positioned in the vertical direction between other sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails.

9. The oven appliance of claim 1, wherein the heating element is one of an electric resistance element or a gas burner.

10. An oven appliance defining a vertical direction, a lateral direction, and a transverse direction, the vertical direction, lateral direction, and transverse direction mutually perpendicular, the oven appliance comprising:

a cabinet;

a cooking chamber defined within the cabinet for receipt of food items for cooking, the cooking chamber delineated by a plurality of walls including a left side wall, a right side wall, and a back wall;

a plurality of sliding rails extending in pairs from each of the left side wall and the right side wall, each pair of sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails configured to hold a baking rack;

a heating chamber defined below the cooking chamber;

a heating element positioned within the heating chamber; and

an air deflector positioned within the cooking chamber, the air deflector one of permanently or removably mountable on the back wall of the cooking chamber.

11. The oven appliance of claim 10, wherein the heating chamber comprises an inlet proximate one or more of a front side, the left side wall, and the right side wall of the heating chamber.

12. The oven appliance of claim 11, wherein the heating chamber comprises an outlet at the back side of the heating chamber, such that air heated by the heating element may emanate from the outlet.

13. The oven appliance of claim 12, wherein the outlet at the back side of the heating chamber is positioned proximate the back wall of the cooking chamber such that air emanating from the outlet impinges on the back wall of the cooking chamber and rises vertically along the back wall of the cooking chamber.

14. The oven appliance of claim 13, wherein the air deflector is positioned on the back wall of the cooking chamber such that air may be deflected in the transverse direction away from the back wall of the cooking chamber and continue rising in the vertical direction away from the heating chamber.

15. The oven appliance of claim 10, wherein the air deflector is positioned at an angle between zero degrees and seventy degrees from the transverse direction towards an upward vertical direction.

16. The oven appliance of claim 10, further comprising a first air deflector positioned in the vertical direction between sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails.

17. The oven appliance of claim 16, further comprising a second air deflector positioned in the vertical direction between other sliding rails of the plurality of sliding rails.

18. The oven appliance of claim 10, wherein the heating element is one of an electric resistance element or a gas burner.

Resources

Images & Drawings included:

Sources:

Recent applications in this class: