The present disclosure relates generally to compressors and more particularly to a capacity modulation system and method for a compressor.
Heat pump and refrigeration systems are commonly operated under a wide range of loading conditions due to changing environmental conditions. In order to effectively and efficiently accomplish a desired cooling and/or heating under these changing conditions, conventional heat pump or refrigeration systems may incorporate a compressor having a capacity modulation system that adjusts an output of the compressor based on the environmental conditions.
An apparatus is provided and may include a control valve that moves a pressure-responsive unloader valve between a first position permitting flow through a valve plate and into a compression mechanism and a second position restricting flow through the valve plate and into the compression mechanism. The control valve may include at least one pressure-responsive valve member movable between a first state supplying discharge-pressure gas to the unloader valve to urge the unloader valve into one of the first position and the second position and a second state venting the discharge-pressure gas from the unloader valve to move the unloader valve into the other of the first position and the second position.
A method is provided and may include selectively providing a chamber with a control fluid and applying a force on a first end of a piston disposed within the chamber by the control fluid to move the piston in a first direction relative to the chamber. The method may further include directing the control fluid through a bore formed in the piston to open a valve and permit the control fluid to pass through the piston. The control fluid may be communicated to an unloader valve to move the unloader valve into one of a first position permitting suction-pressure gas to a compression chamber of a compressor and a second position preventing suction-pressure gas to the compression chamber of the compressor.
Further areas of applicability will become apparent from the description provided herein. It should be understood that the description and specific examples are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
The drawings described herein are for illustration purposes only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way.
The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses. It should be understood that throughout the drawings, corresponding reference numerals indicate like or corresponding parts and features. The present teachings are suitable for incorporation in many different types of scroll and rotary compressors, including hermetic machines, open drive machines and non-hermetic machines.
Various embodiments of a valve apparatus are disclosed that allow or prohibit fluid flow, and may be used to modulate fluid flow to a compressor, for example. The valve apparatus includes a chamber having a piston slidably disposed therein, and a control pressure passage in communication with the chamber. A control pressure communicated to the chamber biases the piston for moving the piston relative to a valve opening, to thereby allow or prohibit fluid communication through the valve opening. When pressurized fluid is communicated to the chamber, the piston is biased to move against the valve opening, and may be used for blocking fluid flow to a suction inlet of a compressor, for example. The valve apparatus may be a separate component that is spaced apart from but fluidly coupled to an inlet of a compressor, or may alternatively be a component included within a compressor assembly. The valve apparatus may be operated together with a compressor, for example, as an independent unit that may be controlled by communication of a control pressure via an external flow control device. The valve apparatus may also optionally include a pressure-responsive valve member and a solenoid valve, to selectively provide for communication of a high or low control pressure fluid to the control pressure passage.
Referring to
As shown in
The compressor 10 is shown in
The chamber 120 is formed in a body 102 of the valve apparatus 100 and slidably receives the piston 110 therein. The valve plate 107 may include a passage 104 formed therein and in selective communication with the valve opening 106. The passage 104 of the valve apparatus 100 may provide for communication of fluid to an inlet of the compressor 10, for example. The body 102 may include a control-pressure passage 124, which is in communication with the chamber 120. A control pressure may be communicated via the control-pressure passage 124 to chamber 120, to move the piston 110 relative to the valve opening 106. The body 102 may be positioned relative to the compression mechanism 14 such that the valve plate 107 is disposed generally between the compression mechanism 14 and the body 102 (
When a pressurized fluid is communicated to the chamber 120, the piston 110 moves against valve opening 106 to prohibit fluid flow therethrough. In an application where the piston 110 blocks fluid flow to a suction inlet of a compressor 10 for “unloading” the compressor, the piston 110 may be referred to as an unloader piston. In such a compressor application, the pressurized fluid may be provided by the discharge-pressure gas of the compressor 10. Suction-pressure gas from the suction chamber 18 of the compressor 10 may also be communicated to the chamber 120, to bias the piston 110 away from the valve opening 106. Accordingly, the piston 110 is movable relative to the valve opening 106 to allow or prohibit fluid communication to passage 104.
With continued reference to
An O-ring seal 134 may be provided in an insert 136 installed in a wall 121 of the chamber 120 to provide a seal between the pressurized fluid within the chamber 120 and the low pressure passage 104. The chamber wall 121 may be integrally formed with the insert 136, thereby eliminate the need for the O-ring seal 134.
The piston 110 is pushed down by the difference in pressure above and below the piston 110 and by the pressure acting on an area defined by a diameter of a seal B. Accordingly, communication of discharge-pressure gas to the chamber 120 generally above the piston 110 causes the piston 110 to move toward and seal the valve opening 106.
The piston 110 may further include a disc-shaped sealing element 140 disposed at an open end of the piston 110. Blocking off fluid flow through the opening 106 is achieved when a valve seat 108 at opening 106 is engaged by the disc-shaped sealing element 140 disposed on the lower end of the piston 110.
The piston 110 may include a piston cylinder 114 with a plug 116 disposed therein proximate to an upper-end portion of the piston cylinder 114. The plug 116 may alternatively be integrally formed with the piston cylinder 114. The piston cylinder 114 may include a retaining member or lip 118 that retains the disc-shaped sealing element 140, a seal C, and a seal carrier or disk 142 within the lower end of the piston 110. A pressurized fluid (such as discharge-pressure gas, for example) may be communicated to the interior of the piston 110 through a port P. The sealing element 140 is moved into engagement with the valve seat 108 by the applied discharge-pressure gas at port P, which is trapped within the piston 110 by seal C. Specifically, the pressurized fluid inside the piston 110 biases the seal carrier 142 downward, which compresses seal C against the disc-shaped sealing element 140. The seal carrier 142, seal C, and the disc-shaped sealing element 140 are moveable within the lower end of the piston cylinder 114 by the discharge-pressure gas disposed within the piston 110. As described above, movement of the piston 110 into engagement with the valve seat 108 prevents flow through the valve opening 106.
As shown in
As shown in
The above “over-travel” distance is the distance that the piston 110 may travel beyond the point the sealing element 140 engages and becomes stationary against the valve seat 108, before the retaining member 118 seats against the valve plate 107. This “over-travel” of the piston 110 results in relative movement between the piston 110 and the sealing element 140. Such relative movement results in the displacement of the seal C and seal carrier 142 against the pressure within the inside of the piston 110, which provides a force for holding the sealing element 140 against the valve seat 108. The amount of “over-travel” movement of the piston cylinder 114 relative to the sealing disc element 140 may result in a slight separation (or distance) D between the retaining member 118 and the sealing element 140, as shown in
The valve plate 107 arrests further movement of the piston 110 and absorbs the impact associated with the momentum of the mass of the piston 110 (less the mass of the stationary seal carrier 142, seal C, and sealing element 140). Specifically, the piston 110 is arrested by the retaining member 118 impacting against the valve plate 107 rather than against the then-stationary sealing element 140 seated on the valve seat 108. Thus, the sealing element 140 does not experience any impact imparted by the piston 110, thereby reducing damage to the sealing element 140 and extending the useful life of the valve apparatus 100. The kinetic energy of the moving piston 110 is therefore absorbed by the valve plate 107 rather than the sealing element 140 disposed on the piston 110.
The piston 110, including the sealing element 140, lends itself to applications where repetitive closure occurs, such as, for example, in duty-cycle modulation of flow to a pump, or suction flow to a compressor for controlling compressor capacity. By way of example, the mass of the piston assembly 110 may be as much as 47 grams, while the sealing element 140, seal carrier 142, and seal C may have a mass of only 1.3 grams, 3.7 grams and 0.7 grams respectively. By limiting the mass that will impact against the valve seat 108 to only the mass of the sealing element 140, seal carrier 142, and seal C, the seal element 140 and valve seat 108 avoid absorbing the kinetic energy associated with the much greater mass of the piston assembly 110. This feature reduces the potential for damage to the sealing element 140, and provides for extending valve function from about 1 million cycles to over 40 million cycles of operation. The piston 110 also provides improved retraction or upward movement of the piston 110, as will be described below.
Referring to
The piston 110 may be moved away from the valve opening 106 by providing a pressurized fluid to a control volume or passage 122 that causes the piston 110 to be biased in an upward direction as shown in
Seal A serves to keep pressurized fluid within the volume 122 between the chamber 120 and piston 110 from escaping to the chamber 120 above the piston 110. In one configuration, discharge-pressure gas is supplied through passage 111 and orifice 113 which feeds the volume 122 bounded by seal A and seal B between the piston 110 and chamber 120. The volume on the outside of the piston 110, trapped by seal A and seal B, is always charged with discharge-pressure gas, thereby providing a lifting force when suction-pressure gas is disposed above piston 110 and within a top portion of the chamber 120 proximate to control-pressure passage 124. Using gas pressure exclusively to lift and lower the piston 110 eliminates the need for springs and the disadvantages associated with such springs (e.g., fatigue limits, wear and piston side forces, for example). While a single piston 110 is described, a valve apparatus 100 having multiple pistons 110 (i.e., operating in parallel, for example) may be employed where a compressor or pump includes multiple suction paths.
The valve apparatus 100 may be a separate component that is spaced apart from but fluidly coupled to an inlet of a compressor, or may alternatively be attached to a compressor (not shown). The valve apparatus 100 may be operated together with a compressor, for example, as an independent unit that may be controlled by communication of a control pressure via an external flow control device. It should be noted that various flow control devices may be employed for selectively communicating one of a suction-pressure gas and a discharge-pressure gas to the control-pressure passage 124 to move the piston 110 relative to the opening 106.
Referring to
In the absence of pressurized fluid, the valve member 126 is moved to a second position where fluid communication between the control-pressure passage 124 and the suction-pressure passage 186 is permitted. The suction-pressure may be provided by communication with a suction line of a compressor, for example. The valve member 126 (shown in
The valve member 126 is movable between the first position shown in
As shown in
The slave piston 160 remains seated against a seal surface 166 when a pressurized fluid is in communication with the slave piston 160. The pressurized fluid may be a discharge pressure gas from a compressor, for example. When pressurized fluid is in communication with the volume above the slave piston 160, the pressurized fluid is allowed to flow through the pressure-responsive slave piston 160 via hole 178 in the center of the slave piston 160 and past the check-valve ball 164. This pressurized fluid, which is at or near discharge pressure, is communicated to the chamber 120 for pushing the piston 110 down against valve opening 106, as previously explained, such that suction flow is blocked and the compressor 10 is “unloaded.” There is a pressure-drop past the check-valve ball 164, as a result of the pressurized fluid acting to overcome the force of the spring 162 biasing the check-valve ball 164 away from the hole 178. This pressure differential across the slave piston 160 is enough to push the slave piston 160 down against surface 166 to provide a seal. This seal effectively traps or restricts high pressure gas to the common port 170 leading to the control-pressure passage 124. The control-pressure passage 124 may be in communication with one or more chambers 120 for opening or closing one or more pistons 110. The common port 170 and control-pressure passage 124 directs discharge-pressure gas to chamber 120 against the piston 110, to thereby push the piston 110 down.
As long as high pressure (i.e., higher than system-suction pressure) exists above the slave piston 160, leakage occurs past the vent orifice 174. The vent orifice 174 is small enough to have a negligible effect on the system operating efficiency while leakage occurs past the vent orifice 174. The vent orifice 174 may include a diameter that is large enough to prevent clogging by debris and small enough to at least partially restrict flow therethrough to tailor an efficiency of the system. In one configuration, the vent orifice 174 may include a diameter of approximately 0.04 inches. The vent orifice 174 discharges upstream of the piston 110 at point 182 (see
Referring to
There is a pressure balance point across the slave piston 160, whereby bleed-off through the vent orifice 174 causes further lowering of top-side pressure and lifts the slave piston 160 upwards, unseating the slave piston 160 from the seal surface 166. At this point, pressure in the common port 170 is vented across the slave piston seal seat 168 and into the suction-pressure passage 186. The suction-pressure passage 186 establishes communication of suction pressure through the common port 170 to the chamber 120, and the piston 110 then lifts when the pressure on top of the piston 110 drops. Additionally, the use of a pressure drop across the slave piston's check valve 164 (in the un-checked direction) will serve to reduce the amount of fluid mass needed to push the piston 110 down.
Use of a slave piston 160 to drive the piston 110 provides for rapid response of the piston 110. The response time of the valve apparatus 100 is a function of the size of the vent orifice 174 and the volume above the slave piston 160 in which pressurized fluid is trapped. Where the valve apparatus 100 controls fluid flow to a suction inlet of a compressor 10, for example, reducing the volume of the common port 170 will improve response time and require less usage of refrigerant per cycle to modulate the compressor. While the above pressure-responsive slave piston 160 is suitable for selectively providing one of a discharge-pressure gas or a suction-pressure gas to a control-pressure passage 124, other alternative means for providing a pressure-responsive valve member may be used in place of the above, as described below.
Referring to
A valve apparatus 100 including the above pressure-responsive valve member 126 may be operated together with a compressor, for example, as an independent unit that may be controlled by communication of pressurized fluid (i.e., discharge pressure) to the pressure-responsive valve member 126. It should be noted that various flow control devices may be employed for selectively allowing or prohibiting communication of discharge pressure to the pressure-responsive valve member.
The valve apparatus 100 may further include a solenoid valve 130, for selectively allowing or prohibiting communication of discharge-pressure gas to the pressure-responsive valve member 126.
Referring to
In connection with the pressure-responsive valve member 126, the solenoid valve 130 substantially has the output functionality of a three-port solenoid valve (i.e., suction-pressure gas or discharge-pressure gas may be directed to the common port 170 or control-pressure passage 124 to raise or lower the piston 110). When the solenoid valve 130 is energized (via wires 132) to an open position, the solenoid valve 130 establishes communication of discharge-pressure gas to the slave piston 160. The slave piston 160 is responsively moved to a first position where it is seated against a seal surface 166, as previously described and shown in
Referring to
The first-valve member 302 may include an upper-flange portion 314, a longitudinally extending portion 316 extending downward from the upper-flange portion 314, and a longitudinally extending passage 318. The passage 318 may extend completely through the first-valve member 302 and may include a flared check valve seat 320.
The second-valve member 304 may be an annular disk disposed around the longitudinally extending portion 316 of the first valve member 302 and may be fixedly attached to the first-valve member 302. While the first- and second-valve members 302, 304 are described and shown as separate components, the first- and second-valve members 302, 304 could alternatively be integrally formed. The first and second-valve members 302, 304 (collectively referred to as the slave piston 302, 304) are slidable within the body 102 between a first position (
The intermediate-isolation seal 308 and the upper seal 310 may be fixedly retained in a seal-holder member 324, which in turn, is fixed within the body 102. The intermediate-isolation seal 308 may be disposed around the longitudinally extending portion 316 of the first-valve member 302 (i.e., below the upper-flange portion 314) and may include a generally U-shaped cross section. An intermediate pressure cavity 326 may be formed between the U-Shaped cross section of the intermediate-isolation seal 308 and the upper-flange portion 314 of the first-valve member 302.
The upper seal 310 may be disposed around the upper-flange portion 314 and may also include a generally U-shaped cross section that forms an upper cavity 328 beneath the base of the solenoid valve 130. The upper cavity 328 may be in fluid communication with a pressure reservoir 330 formed in the body 102. The pressure reservoir 330 may include a vent orifice 332 in fluid communication with a suction-pressure port 334. The suction-pressure port 334 may be in fluid communication with a source of suction gas such as, for example, a suction inlet of a compressor. Feed drillings or passageways 336, 338 may be formed in the body 102 and seal-holder member 324, respectively, to facilitate fluid communication between the suction-pressure port 334 and the intermediate pressure cavity 326 to continuously maintain the intermediate pressure cavity 326 at suction pressure. Suction pressure may be any pressure that is less than discharge pressure and greater than a vacuum pressure of the vacuum port 322. Vacuum pressure, for purposes of the present disclosure, may be a pressure that is lower than suction pressure and does not need to be a pure vacuum.
The valve seat member 306 may be fixed within the body 102 and may include a seat surface 340 and an annular passage 342. In the first position (
The check valve 312 may include a ball 344 in contact with spring 346 and may extend through the annular passage 342 of the valve seat member 306. The ball 344 may selectively engage the check valve seat 320 of the first-valve member 302 to prohibit communication of discharge gas between the solenoid valve 130 and the control-pressure passage 124.
With continued reference to
The discharge gas accumulates in the upper cavity 328 formed by the upper seal 310 and in the discharge gas reservoir 330, where it is allowed to bleed into the suction-pressure port 334 through the vent orifice 332. The vent orifice 332 has a sufficiently small diameter to allow the discharge gas reservoir to remain substantially at discharge pressure while the solenoid valve 130 is energized.
A portion of the discharge gas is allowed to flow through the longitudinally extending passage 318 and urge the ball 344 of the check valve 312 downward, thereby creating a path for the discharge gas to flow through to the control-pressure passage 124 (
To return the piston 110 to the upward (or loaded) position, the solenoid valve 130 may be de-energized, thereby prohibiting the flow of discharge gas therefrom. The discharge gas may continue to bleed out of the discharge gas reservoir 330 through the vent orifice 332 and into the suction-pressure port 334 until the longitudinally extending passage 318, the upper cavity 328, and the discharge gas reservoir 330 substantially reach suction pressure. At this point, there is no longer a net downward force urging the second-valve member 304 against the seat surface 340 of the valve seat member 306. The spring 346 of the check valve 312 is thereafter allowed to bias the ball 344 into sealed engagement with check valve seat 320, thereby prohibiting fluid communication between the control-pressure passage 124 and the longitudinally extending passage 318.
As described above, the intermediate pressure cavity 326 is continuously supplied with fluid at suction pressure (i.e., intermediate pressure), thereby creating a pressure differential between the vacuum port 322 (at vacuum pressure) and the intermediate pressure cavity 326 (at intermediate pressure). The pressure differential between the intermediate pressure cavity 326 and the vacuum port 322 applies a force on valve members 302, 304 and urges the valve members 302, 304 upward. Sufficient upward movement of the valve members 302, 304 allows fluid communication between the chamber 120 and the vacuum port 322. Placing chamber 120 in fluid communication with the vacuum port 322 allows the discharge gas occupying chamber 120 to evacuate through the vacuum port 322. The evacuating discharge gas flowing from chamber 120 to vacuum port 322 (
In a condition where a compressor is started with discharge and suction pressures being substantially balanced and the piston 110 is in the unloaded position, the pressure differential between the intermediate pressure cavity 326 and the vacuum port 322 provides a net upward force on the valve members 302, 304, thereby facilitating fluid communication between the chamber 120 and the vacuum port 322. The vacuum pressure of the vacuum port 322 will draw the piston 110 upward into the loaded position, even if the pressure differential between the intermediate-pressure cavity 326 and the area upstream of 182 is insufficient to force the piston 110 upward into the loaded position. This facilitates moving the piston 110 out of the unloaded position and into the loaded position at a start-up condition where discharge and suction pressures are substantially balanced.
Referring now to
The use of a porting plate 480 provides a means for routing suction or discharge-pressure gas from the solenoid valve 430 to the chambers 420 on top of single or multiple pistons 410. The port on the solenoid valve 430 that controls the flow of gas to load or unload the pistons 410 is referred to as the “common” port 470, which communicates via control-pressure passage 424 to chambers 420. The solenoid valve 430 in this application may be a three-port valve in communication with suction and discharge-pressure gas and a common port 470 that is charged with suction or discharge-pressure gas depending on the desired state of the piston 410.
Capacity may be regulated by opening and closing one or more of the plurality of pistons 410 to control flow capacity. A predetermined number of pistons 410 may be used, for example, to block the flow of suction gas to a compressor, for example. The percentage of capacity reduction is approximately equal to the ratio of the number of “blocked” cylinders to the total number of cylinders. Capacity reduction may be achieved by the various disclosed valve mechanism features and methods of controlling the valve mechanism. The valve's control of discharge-pressure gas and suction-pressure gas may also be used in either a blocked suction application or in a manner where capacity is modulated by activating and de-activating the blocking pistons 410 in a duty-cycle fashion. Using multiple pistons 410 to increase the available flow area will result in increased full-load compressor efficiency.
Furthermore, it is recognized that one or more pistons 110 forming a bank of valve cylinders may be modulated together or independently, or one or more banks may not be modulated while others are modulated. The plurality of banks may be controlled by a single solenoid valve with a manifold, or each bank of valve cylinders may be controlled by its own solenoid valve. The modulation method may comprise duty-cycle modulation that for example, provides an on-time that ranges from zero to 100% relative to an off-time, where fluid flow may be blocked for a predetermined off-time period. Additionally, the modulation method used may be digital (duty-cycle modulation), conventional blocked suction, or a combination thereof. The benefit of using a combination may be economic. For example, a full range of capacity modulation in a multi-bank compressor may be provided by using a lower-cost conventional blocked suction in all but one bank, where the above described digital modulation unloader piston configuration is provided in the one remaining bank of cylinders.
As previously described and shown in
The compressor 10 further includes a control-pressure passage 124 in communication with the chamber 120, where the control-pressure passage 124 communicates one of suction-pressure gas or a discharge-pressure gas to the chamber 120. The communication of discharge-pressure gas to the chamber 120 causes the piston 110 to move to block the valve opening 106 to prohibit flow therethrough. The communication of suction-pressure gas to the chamber 120 and communication of discharge-pressure gas to the volume 122 causes the piston 110 to move away from the valve opening 106 to permit flow therethrough.
The compressor 10 may further include a valve member 126 proximate the control-pressure passage 124. As previously described and shown in
The compressor 10 including the valve apparatus 100 may further include a solenoid valve 130 for establishing or prohibiting communication of discharge pressure to the valve member 126 (or the pressure-responsive valve 300). As previously described and shown in
As previously described and shown in
The one or more pistons 110 in the above disclosed compressor combination may be controlled by a solenoid valve assembly, for example, that directs either discharge pressure or suction pressure to the top of each piston 110. The solenoid or the pressure-responsive valve may be configured to vent the pressure above the valve member 126 (or slave piston 160 or 302, 304) to a low pressure source, such as a chamber at suction pressure or vacuum pressure on the closed side of the unloader piston. A single solenoid valve 130 may be capable of operating multiple unloader pistons 110 of the valve apparatus 100 simultaneously, through a combination of drillings and gas flow passages.
It should be noted that the compressor 10 and valve apparatus 100 may alternatively be operated or controlled by communication of a control pressure a separate external flow control device (
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/177,528 filed on Jul. 22, 2008, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/951,274 filed on Jul. 23, 2007. The disclosures of the above applications are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120177508 A1 | Jul 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60951274 | Jul 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12177528 | Jul 2008 | US |
Child | 13426094 | US |