The invention relates to a cooling device, in particular for an electrical cabinet, having a refrigeration circuit that comprises an evaporator, a condenser, and a compressor, the condensed water that occurs being evaporated in a condensate evaporator having a condensed water receiving space.
Cooling devices of this kind are used, for example, for climate control of electrical cabinets in which a number of electronic components, which discharge considerable dissipated power in the form of heat, are accommodated. The condensed water occurring at the evaporator drips off and is caught in a condensate collection container arranged therebeneath. It is known to convey the condensed water, using a pump device, out of the condensate collection container to an electrically heated condensate evaporator in which the condensate is evaporated and discharged as water vapor to the environment.
The fact that the fill limit for condensed water in the condensate collection container has been reached is ascertained by way of a sensor device or a float switch, which switches on both the pump device and the heating system in the condensate evaporator. As soon as the condensate level in the condensate collection container drops below a predetermined fill level, both the pump device and the heating system in the condensate evaporator are switched off. This solution is technically very complex and thus expensive to implement, and furthermore requires additional energy for electrical heating of the condensate evaporator.
In addition to condensate evaporation using electrical heating, the use of heat from hot gas (high-pressure line of the refrigerant circuit) is also known.
It is an object of the invention to describe a form of condensate removal by means of condensate evaporation, in particular in a cooling device, in which the condensate that occurs is evaporated with the least possible technical complexity, without additional energy. In addition, the condensate evaporator used for this is intended to be of the simplest possible construction.
In accordance therewith, provision is made in the context of the condensate evaporator according to the present invention that the receiving space is arranged in thermal contact with the compressor; and in order to generate water vapor, the condensate is heated by the waste heat of the compressor. According to the present invention, therefore, the waste heat of the compressor is used to heat and to evaporate the condensed water present in the receiving space. The use of additional energy, for example for an electrically operated heating system, is omitted. Instead, the waste heat that is in any case produced by the compressor of the cooling unit is used for evaporation.
Operating costs can thus be decreased by using the condensate evaporator according to the present invention. In addition, complex design of a heating system operated with additional energy is not necessary. The condensate evaporator according to the present invention is thus, overall, economical in terms of manufacture and operation.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the receiving space can abut against the enveloping surface of the compressor and can at least partly fit around it. This on the one hand ensures that good thermal contact exists between the compressor and the receiving space. On the other hand, a particularly compact configuration is achieved.
In particularly simple fashion, the receiving space can be embodied as a collection trough. The collection trough can comprise a substantially rectangular cross section open toward the top, and a thin inner wall abutting against the enveloping surface of the compressor, a bottom, and an outer wall. A configuration of this kind can be manufactured very easily, for example, as an injection-molded plastic part. The thinner the configuration of the inner wall abutting against the enveloping surface of the compressor, the better the heat transfer from the compressor to the condensed water that is located in the receiving space and is to be evaporated.
In order to improve even further the heat transfer from the compressor to the condensed water present in the receiving space, a thermally conductive paste can be introduced between the inner wall of the receiving space and the enveloping surface of the compressor.
According to a preferred embodiment, the condensate occurring at the evaporator of the cooling unit, for example due to a temperature falling below the dew point, can be introduced via an inflow hose into the receiving space of the condensate evaporator. The condensate collected at the evaporator in a suitable vessel can flow by gravity, i.e. without the use of an electrically operated pump, into the receiving space of the condensate evaporator.
In order to enable optimized inflow, the inflow hose can be held by a holding element in a manner oriented substantially perpendicular to the bottom of the receiving space. The holding element can be, in particular, a cross-type fitting or a suitable rib arrangement shaped onto the bottom of the receiving space.
In order to prevent uncontrolled overflow of condensed water if it accumulates excessively in the receiving space, a through hole, onto which an overflow tube projecting into the receiving space is shaped, can be embodied on the bottom of the receiving space. In this context, the height of the overflow tube above the bottom of the receiving space is less than the height of the inner or outer wall of the receiving space.
To prevent the condensed water that flows out via the overflow tube from running out in uncontrolled fashion, a tubular fitting onto which a suitable runoff hose can be attached can be shaped onto the through hole, on the lower side of the bottom facing away from the receiving space.
The receiving space can comprise at least one region having an enlarged cross section, in which region the holding element of the inflow hose, and/or the overflow tube, are shaped on. The result of this feature is that substantially continuous heat transfer to the condensed water surrounding the enveloping surface of the compressor is achieved, and additional devices in the region do not exert an interfering influence on evaporation. In addition, the enlarged region provides comfortable handling when attaching the inflow hose onto the holding element, and/or when attaching the runoff hose onto the tubular fitting of the overflow tube.
In order to facilitate bendability of the receiving space for mounting onto the enveloping surface of an evaporator, the receiving space can comprise at least one region having a constricted cross section.
According to a further preferred embodiment of the invention, the receiving space can at least partly fit around the enveloping surface of the compressor in approximately C-shaped fashion, the free ends of the receiving space being closed off by terminating walls.
The free ends of the receiving space can be secured with respect to the enveloping surface of the compressor by means of a clamping element. The clamping element, which in particular can be a spring clip, can engage onto extensions that are shaped onto the free ends of the receiving space.
The invention further describes a cooling device, in particular for an electrical cabinet, having a refrigeration circuit that comprises an evaporator, a condenser, and a compressor, the condensed water being introduced into the condensate evaporator according to the present invention that is arranged in thermal contact with the compressor.
The invention will be explained below in further detail with reference to an exemplifying embodiment depicted in the drawings, in which:
The height of overflow tube 26 above bottom 18 of receiving space 12 is less than the height of inner wall 16 or outer wall 20 of receiving space 12 above bottom 18.
Receiving space 12 comprises a region 32 having an enlarged cross section. Region 32 is formed by a protuberance of outer wall 20. Arranged in region 32 are on the one hand holding element 22 for attachment of the inflow hose, and on the other hand overflow tube 26 that is shaped onto through hole 24.
Receiving space 12 furthermore comprises a region 34 having a constricted cross section. This constricted cross section serves for flexible bending of the C-shaped receiving space 12 for installation onto a compressor (not shown in
The C-shaped receiving space 12 forms two free ends 36a and 36b. Free end 36a is closed off by a terminating wall 38a, and free end 36b by a terminating wall 38b.
Shaped onto free ends 36a and 36b of receiving space 12, and prolonging terminating walls 38a and 38b, are respective extensions 42a and 42b onto which a clamping element 40, embodied as a spring clip, engages. The clip-shaped clamping element 40 is shaped from a resilient metal sheet and has two ends 44a and 44b that are bent into an S- or Z-shape. End 44a of clamping element 40 engages behind extension 42a at free end 36a of receiving space 12, whereas end 44b of clamping element 40 engages behind extension 42b at free end 36b of receiving space 12.
It is evident from
A tubular fitting 30 for receiving a runoff hose (not shown) is shaped onto passthrough hole 24 on the lower side 28, facing away from receiving space 12 and region 32, of the bottom of region 32 and of bottom 18 of the receiving space.
Compressor 10 has a substantially cylindrical enveloping surface 14. A mist separator 46 is mounted on the front side of compressor 10. Mist separator 46 is connected via an elbow 48 to compressor 10.
Receiving space 12 of the condensate evaporator is arranged in thermal contact with compressor 10, receiving space 12 being abutted against enveloping surface 14 of the compressor. Receiving space 12, embodied as a collection trough, abuts with its thin inner wall 16 directly against enveloping surface 14 of compressor 10. A thermally conductive paste (not shown) can additionally be introduced between enveloping surface 14 of compressor 10 and inner wall 16 of receiving space 12.
Receiving space 12 fits around enveloping surface 14 of compressor 10 in approximately C-shaped fashion, free ends 36a and 36b of receiving space 12 being secured by means of clamping element 40 with respect to enveloping surface 14 of the compressor.
Clamping element 40 has, in the region of elbow 48, a cutout 50 through which elbow 48 extends from compressor 10 to mist separator 46.
Compressor 10 shown in
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 2008 052 290.2 | Oct 2008 | DE | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/EP09/07218 | 10/8/2009 | WO | 00 | 5/18/2011 |