The present invention relates to a arrangement in a system for accumulation and evacuation of water such as defrosting, condensation and cleaning water from refrigeration and cooling units. The system includes a reservoir, tank or container holding an amount of liquid, a piping arrangement and a vacuum pump and a control device to start and stop the vacuum pump.
Such systems have been increasingly used for the evacuation of condensed water from refrigeration and cooling units in warehouses and stores where drainage in the floor is not available. The condensed water is instead “lifted” in a vertical pipe from a water tank provided in conjunction with the refrigeration or cooling unit to a piping arrangement provided in the ceiling above such unit and further to a vacuum pump provided in an available machine room or other suitable room in the subject warehouse. The pumps commonly used in such systems are liquid ring screw pumps, with or without a macerator as further described below, which can handle liquid containing particles that may be ground to smaller pieces. Pumps of this kind are commonly used in vacuum sewage systems on board ships and on offshore installations. However, such systems are also increasingly being used on land due to reduced water requirement and easy handling and treatment of waste water, as well as its flexibility as regards installation of piping and layout given by such systems.
The applicant of the present application introduced in 1986, cf. EP patent No. 0 287 350, for the first time the novel vacuum sewage system where the vacuum in the system was generated by means of a liquid ring screw pump of this kind and where the pump is used as well to discharge the sewage from a vacuum tank or the like to which it is connected.
EP patent No. 0 454 794, also filed by the applicant, further shows a revolutionary improvement of a vacuum sewage system where the liquid ring screw pump is provided with a grinder or macerator and is connected directly with the suction pipe of the system, whereby vacuum is generated in the sewage suction pipe and sewage is discharged directly from the system by means of the pump.
The present invention may, or may not, include such grinder provided at the inlet end of the Archimedes screw rotor.
As stated above, vacuum systems have been increasingly used for the evacuation of condensed water from refrigeration units in warehouses and stores where drainage in the floor is not available. The vacuum in such systems is normally between 60 and 50 kPa (40 and 50% below atmospheric pressure), implying that the condensed or defrosted water having a density of 1 kg/dm3 is lifted 4-5 meters at a maximum. With the present solution, the water may be lifted twice the height, i.e. 8-10 meters with the same vacuum by letting air into the suction pipe as explained in a later section. Thus, it is possible to evacuate condensed water in warehouses where the height from the floor to the ceiling is doubled. However, due to the narrow space between the individual refrigeration unit and the floor it has been a challenge to exploit this evacuation principle. The height between the floor and bottom of the modern refrigeration units is just 5-7 centimetres and therefore it has been difficult to obtain sufficient space for a container to collect the condensed water. With the present invention is provided an arrangement making it possible to evacuate condensed water and defrosting water effectively using the “floor to ceiling evacuation principle”.
The arrangement according to the invention is characterized by the features as defined in the attached independent claim 1.
Advantageous embodiments of the invention are further defined in the attached dependent claims 2-7.
The invention will be further described in the following by way of example and with reference to the enclosed figures, where;
The main features of the invention are further shown in
The water collection tray 11 is provided with a lid 15 having an opening 16, through which the water enters from the water drainage opening (not shown) of the respective refrigeration or cooling unit 4.
The system as shown in the figure is normally used and operated in two different modes, intermittently or continuously as described in the following. In small installations, were there is only one or a few number of water or grey water sources, intermittent running of the vacuum pump is normally most suitable, Water from a refrigeration unit (not shown in the figure) is accumulated in the water collection tray 11. Once the water reaches a set level, the water level sensor or switch 10 in the water collection tray sends a signal to the control unit 7 to start the vacuum pump 5. Electrical wiring is of practical reasons not shown in the figure. The pump generates vacuum in the pipe system thereby lowering the pressure in the pipe system 1. When the vacuum has reached a desired level, the discharge valve 3 for the respective refrigeration unit where the water collection tray 11 needs to be emptied, is opened by the control unit 7 and water is sucked from the water collection tray 11. As formerly stated, water may be lifted twice the height, i.e. 8-10 meters with the same vacuum and thus, an air inlet nozzle 6 (
Once the water collection tray 11 is empty, the water level detector or switch sends a signal to the control unit 7 to stop the vacuum pump 5 and close the discharge valve 3. In such small system as described above, the emptying of the water collection tray 11 may even be done by just starting and stopping the pump, without using the discharge valve 3, It is however expedient to use a valve to secure proper working and avoiding return of water from the pressure side of the system.
In larger systems, were there are several different water collection trays 11 working in parallel pipe loops like the one shown in
In some situations when the system is running over a period of time, there may be a build-up of liquid in the vertical pipe section 2 of the pipeline as the remaining water after each running of the pump is not returning to the water collection tray 11. To avoid such build-up of water in the vertical pipe section 2, an air conduit inlet opening 9 is provided at the upper part of vertical pipe section 2. The hole is so small that a minor amount of air is allowed to enter into the pipe such that the remaining water in the vertical pipe section 2, after each emptying operation, is allowed to return to the tank 4, but the vacuum in the pipe is not influenced when the pump is running.
The dimensioning of the components of a system exploiting the inventive arrangement is dependent on different parameters such as required capacity (number of refrigeration or cooling units), pipe diameters, available space and size of water collection trays, the required number vacuum pumps etc.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20170477 | Mar 2017 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/NO2018/000006 | 2/27/2018 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2018/174719 | 9/27/2018 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5562003 | Lefebvre | Oct 1996 | A |
5664430 | Karman | Sep 1997 | A |
6305403 | von Palffy | Oct 2001 | B1 |
8869548 | Piccione | Oct 2014 | B2 |
20080078197 | Jang | Apr 2008 | A1 |
20120151953 | Timbs | Jun 2012 | A1 |
20140130529 | Kaiser et al. | May 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1662196 | Aug 2005 | CN |
102010039576 | Feb 2012 | DE |
0287350 | Oct 1988 | EP |
1085134 | Mar 2001 | EP |
1403590 | Mar 2004 | EP |
2636966 | Sep 2013 | EP |
H06-129755 | May 1994 | JP |
H10-281627 | Oct 1998 | JP |
9010123 | Sep 1990 | WO |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report and Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority dated May 31, 2018 in corresponding International application No. PCT/NO2018/000006; 6 pages. |
European Search Report dated Mar. 3, 2020, in corresponding European application No. 18771011.6; 12 pages. |
Jets, “Jets Vacuum Systems for supermarkets—simpler condensate water transport”, Sanitary Systems—made to please, May 2, 2015, XP055667990, total 8 pages. Retrieved from the Internet: URL:https://web.archive.org/web/2017010118 3645if /http://standard.jetsgroup.com/en/Sanitary-systems/-/media/ACE3E889582342F398 BDF5C49D274DFD.ashx [retrieved on Dec. 12, 2020]. |
Chinese Office Action dated Sep. 2, 2020, in connection with corresponding CN Application No. 201880019453.5 (13 pp., including machine-generated English translation). |
“Sanitary systems—made to please,” Jets Sanitary Systems for Any Ship, May 2, 2015. 32 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20200080764 A1 | Mar 2020 | US |