This invention relates, generally, to Archimedes screw pumps and, more particularly, to Archimedes screw pumps configured as turbine generators.
Archimedes' screw, also called the Archimedean screw or screwpump, is a machine historically used for transferring water from a low-lying body of water into irrigation ditches. The screw pump is commonly attributed to Archimedes on the occasion of his visit to Egypt, but this tradition may reflect only that the apparatus was unknown to the Greeks before Hellenistic times and introduced in his lifetime by unknown Greek engineers.
An Archimedes' screw consists of a helical or spiral surface (the screw fitted inside a cylindrical pipe that is open at both ends. Typically, the helical surface surrounds a central cylindrical shaft, to which rotational power is applied via a hand crank, electric motor, windmill, or other means. In use, the device is positioned on a slant, with a lower end under water. As the helix revolves, the bottom end of the device repeatedly scoops up small volumes of water, and small volumes of water are slowly raised inwells formed by the inside surface of the cylindrical pipe and the helical surfaces. Eventually, these small volumes of water begin to pour from the top of the tube. In the past, screw pumps have been used for draining water out of mines and for raising water from rivers or canals onto adjacent irrigated farmland.
In some designs, the screw is fixed to the casing, and they rotate together instead of the screw turning within a stationary casing. A screw could be sealed with pitch resin or some other adhesive to its casing, or cast as a single piece in bronze. Some researchers have postulated that Archimedes' screw pumps were used to irrigate the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Depictions of Greek and Roman water screws show them being powered by a human treading on the outer casing to turn the entire apparatus as one piece, which would require that the casing be rigidly attached to the screw.
Along with transferring water to irrigation ditches, the device was also used for draining land that was underneath the sea in the Netherlands and other places in the creation of polders. A part of the sea would be enclosed and the water would be pumped out of the enclosed area, starting the process of draining the land for use in agriculture. Depending on the length and diameter of the screws, more than one machine could be used successively to lift the same water.
An Archimedes' screw was used by British soils engineer John Burland in the successful 2001 stabilization of the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Small amounts of subsoil saturated by groundwater were removed from far below the north side of the Tower, and the weight of the tower itself corrected the lean.
Archimedes' screws are used in sewage treatment plants because they cope well with varying rates of flow and with suspended solids. An auger in a snow blower or grain elevator is essentially an Archimedes' screw. Many types of axial flow pumps contain what is, basically, an Archimedes' screw.
The principle is also found in pescalators, which are Archimedes' screws designed to lift fish safely from ponds and transport them to another location. This technology is used primarily at fish hatcheries, where it is desirable to minimize the physical handling of fish.
The Archimedes' screw has also found use as an electrical generator. If water is poured into the top of an Archimedes' screw, it will force the screw to rotate. The rotating shaft can then be used to drive an electric generator. Such an installation has the same benefits as using the screw for pumping: the ability to handle very dirty water and widely varying rates of flow with high efficiency. Settle Hydro and Torrs Hydro are two reverse screw micro-hydro facilities operating in England. The Settle Hydro facility which is owned by the Settle, North Yorkshire community, is located on the River Ribble, at Settle Weir near Bridge End Mill. A reverse Archimedean screw, which uses part of the former mill race, generates 50 kW of electricity. The Torrs Hydro facility, which is owned by the New Mills, Derbyshire community, is located on the River Goyt, immediately after its confluence with the River Sett at the Torr weir. Its 2.4-meter-diameter reverse Archimedean screw generates up to 63 kW of electricity. As a generator, the Archimedean screw is good at low heads, commonly found in English rivers, including the Thames. Windsor Castle receives its electrical power from a reverse screw micro-hydro generator operating on the Thames.
In 2005, Ritz Atro, a German screw pump manufacturer, began to use screw pumps to convert the kinetic energy of water flowing from a higher elevation to a lower elevation into electrical energy using a synchronous induction motor. The helical flighting on the Ritz Atro screw pump is perpendicular to the torque tube.
Prior art Archimedean screws have the flightings secured to a torque tube in such a configuration that if a radius of the torque tube were extended outwardly from the exterior surface of the tube, it would pass completely through the flighting and exit the outer edge of the flighting. Another way of describing the configuration of the flightings of prior art Archimedean screws is that the flighting is perpendicular to the axis of the torque tube.
The present invention provides an Archimedean screw turbine generator of increased efficiency. Rather than having the helical flightings of the turbine perpendicular to the central axis of the torque tube, this design incorporates cupped or cambered flighting. The Archimedean screw is, of course, installed on a slant. Flightings are angled upstream so that they form an uphill-facing acute angle. A presently preferred range for the acute angle of flighting attachment, at the base of the flighting, is about 45 degrees. The angle decreases to about 22.5 degrees near the flighting's outer edge. This gives each flighting an arced profile. The cambered flightings increase the turbine's overall efficiency, as well as its efficiency across a broad range of fluid flows. The improved Archimedean screw turbine produces efficient power from about 5 percent of design flow to about 110 percent of design flow. In addition, design flow efficiency is 9-10 percent better than existing Archimedean screw generators. Prior art turbines of the Archimedean screw type operate efficiently only near design-rated flows. Most are turned off if flows drop more than 30 percent below design-rated flow figures. For a presently-preferred embodiment of the invention, the screw axially rotates within a close-fitting half pipe.
Efficiency of the improved Archimedean screw turbine is also enhanced by smoothing water flow to the top end of the turbine, as well as from the bottom end of the turbine. This is accomplished by providing a channel, at both the top and bottom ends of the turbine, that narrows as it approaches the turbine, with the narrow end of the channel having a width and a depth that coincide with the shape of the respective end of the half pipe. This design reduces turbulence at both the entry and exit ends of the turbine.
Though a prototype turbine has been constructed using a standard sealed, tapered roller bearing assembly (the same type of bearing that is used for trailer wheel bearings) at each end of the turbine, it is recognized that such bearings are not ideal for submersed applications. As the lower bearing of the turbine may be constantly submerged in muddy water, the passage of water and mud through the seals, in addition to abrasion and corrosion of the bearing rollers and races, are serious issues. These problems can be averted by using bearing assemblies made of “supermaterials” such as polycrystalline diamond (PCD), silicon cemented diamond (SCD) and polycrystalline cubic boron nitride (PCBN). Bearing assemblies made of such materials require no lubricating grease, and are designed for long life even when exposed to an abrasive mud environment.
The improved Archimedean screw turbine is designed for “run of the river” installations, which means that there is no need for a reservoir at the top of the turbine. The turbine is capable of capturing most of the potential energy across the variable flows. An inverter developed for the windmill industry is employed in conjunction with a permanent-magnet servo motor used as a generator. So that the servo motor will operate within an efficient speed range, a two- or three-stage helical-bevel-gear speed multiplier unit couples the screw turbine to the servo motor. The servo motor outputs three-phase AC power having a voltage that varies with motor speed. A bridge rectifier converts the AC power to DC current. An inverter is then used to convert the DC current to 240-volt AC power. The inverter employs a Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT) table that is formulated so as to extract the maximum amount of energy derived from a combination of generator speed and water flow. The table was generated in response to tests performed by the inventor. By using a permanent-magnet servo motor as a generator, usable energy is generated whenever the motor is spinning. The faster it spins, the greater the power generation.
Most generators used for hydropower generation, on the other hand, need to spin at a synchronous speed. By either using governors or dumping excess load to maintain synchronous speed, much energy is wasted.
The invention will now be described with reference to the attached drawing
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Although only a single embodiment of the improved Archimedean screw turbine has been shown and described, it will be obvious to those having ordinary skill in the art that changes and modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope and the spirit of the invention as hereinafter claimed.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61798833 | Mar 2013 | US |