1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a condenser and especially to a tube therefor which is particularly suited for use in condensers that operate under operating pressures of approximately 20 bar. One particular condenser according to the invention, is what is known as a flat-tube condenser. In such a flat-tube condenser, tubes of substantially flat cross section extend between header tubes. Cooling fins, supported on the flat surfaces of the tubes, may be disposed between the tubes of substantially flat cross section. With such an arrangement, the intention is that the heat from the refrigerant circulating in the condenser is dissipated to a coolant, usually air, substantially flowing through the condenser.
2. Description of Related Art
U.S. Pat. No. 5,307,870 describes header tubes for flat-tube condensers having header tubes of arcuate cross section. Parallel tubes run between these header tubes, in a manner such that a parallel flow condenser is formed. In other words, refrigerant vapor is introduced into one of the header tubes, passed through the parallel tubes, then is condensed and passed to the other header tube, and then leaves the condenser. In one embodiment, this printed publication describes tubes with parallel flow channels of round cross section formed therein. According to this United States patent a condenser of this kind is provided for high-pressure condensers.
German published application 198 45 336 relates to a heat exchanger which is operated with CO2 as a refrigerant under high operating pressures of up to 100 bar. A multi-chamber flat tube is used therein and is formed as a rectilinear tube for a parallel flow condenser or as a tube with serpentine curvature for a parallel flow condenser. The channels in the tube are preferably provided with an oval, or alternatively circular, cross section. The circular cross section is disclosed as being suitable for high pressure resistance. In order to achieve a high heat transmission capacity, where the channels are of round cross section, the two wider sides of the flat tubes have an undulating profile.
In addition, in parallel flow or serpentine flow heat exchangers, use is made of flat tubes whose flow channels have rectangular or triangular cross sections. Reference is made here by way of example to GB A-2,133,525, JP-A-59-13877, U.S. Pat. No. 3,689,972, U.S. Pat. No. 2,136,641, GB-A-1,601,954, JP-A-57-66389, JP-A-58-221390 or EP-A-583,851. In many cases, the surfaces of the flow channels are enlarged by means of suitable measures, such as fins and grooves, in order to achieve higher heat transmission (cf. JP-A-59-13877, JP-A-57-66389 and JP-A-58-221390). By contrast with these shapes, JP-A-114145 illustrates rhomboidal flow channels which are said to ensure improved contact between the gaseous refrigerant and the walls of the flow channels and an improved outflow of condensate.
In addition, what are known as serpentine condensers are known, in which a refrigerant is passed backward and forward a plurality of times through various groups of tubes between two header tubes provided with partitions, cf. EP-A-255 131. The tubes used for this purpose exclusively have flow channels with square or rectangular cross sections.
Therefore, one object of the present invention is to provide an improved tube for a condenser operating at pressures of approximately 20 bar and a similarly improved condenser, especially a serpentine condenser.
In accomplishing the objects of the invention, there has been provided according to one aspect of the invention a tube for a condenser operating under pressures of approximately 20 bar, comprising: a cross section having a width that is greater than its height; a substantially flat profile along a width of the tube; and a plurality of flow channels arranged side by side along a width of the tube, wherein the flow channels comprise a substantially round cross section and further comprise a hydraulic diameter of 1.10 to 1.30 mm.
In accordance with an additional aspect of the invention, there is provided a condenser operating under pressures of approximately 20 bar comprising at least one tube for a condenser, wherein the tube comprises a cross section having a width that is greater than its height; a substantially flat profile along a width of the tube; and a plurality of flow channels arranged side by side along a width of the tube, wherein the flow channels comprise a substantially round cross section and further comprise a hydraulic diameter of 1.10 to 1.30 mm.
In accordance with yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a motor vehicle comprising a condenser operating under pressures of approximately 20 bar comprising at least one tube which comprises a cross section having a width that is greater than its height; a substantially flat profile along a width of the tube; and a plurality of flow channels arranged side by side along a width of the tube, wherein the flow channels comprise a substantially round cross section and further comprise a hydraulic diameter of 1.10 to 1.30 mm.
Further objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description of preferred embodiments that follows when considered together with the accompanying drawings.
The invention is explained in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The applicant has found, surprisingly, that a tube of substantially flat cross section and having a plurality of flow channels disposed side by side operates particularly effectively for a condenser operating under pressures of approximately 20 bar if the flow channels are substantially round and have a hydraulic diameter of from 1.10 mm to 1.30 mm. A further advantageous effect is achieved by a tube having flow channels that have a hydraulic diameter of from 1.14 mm to 1.26 mm, and a diameter of from 1.18 mm to 1.22 mm is further preferred. The best results are achieved by a tube having a hydraulic diameter of approximately 1.20 mm.
It has also been found that tubes of flat cross section and having circular flow channels disposed in series operate to particularly advantageous effect in serpentine condesners. This is the case to a particularly notable extent in condensers as described subsequently with reference to the preferred embodiments. This is attributed to the fact the pressure drop over the longer flow paths that generally have to be covered by the refrigerant in serpentine condensers is lower as compared to parallel flow condensers. As a result, larger quantities of refrigerant can be passed through the condenser per unit of time with the same overall expenditure of energy. Furthermore, improved heat transfer is evidently achieved as compared to flow paths in conventional serpentine condensers.
In addition, the production of such tubes is less elaborate and hence more cost-effective, which is particularly significant in mass production. Production takes place by extrusion, for example. The shape of the flow channels may be created by appropriately formed dies. Round dies have proven advantageous, as the delay on cooling is minimal and relatively uniform, and the dies exhibit much less wear than in the case of angular dies. In conventional angular dies, wear takes place especially at the corners.
Turning now to the drawings,
The refrigerant located in the upper region of the first header tube 21, which is substantially in gaseous form, flows through a first set of tubes 10a to the second header tube 22. Due to the partition 27a, refrigerant can only flow from the refrigerant inlet 24 through the first set of tubes 10a which are connected to the upper, separate region of the first header tube 21. On the path from the first header tube 21 to the second header tube 22, a first heat exchange takes place between the refrigerant and the cooling medium (e.g., air) flowing perpendicularly to the plane of the paper. Such a condenser is preferably used in automobile air conditioning systems. In this case, air normally flows through the condenser 20, e.g. between the tubes 10 and the cooling fins 23, as a coolant. The structure shown is intended to guarantee the best possible heat transfer between the refrigerant and the coolant. In this manner, a first heat exchange takes place and a first condensation of the refrigerant in the first set of pipes 10a also takes place.
Having arrived in the second header tube 22, the refrigerant is able to flow as far as the first partition 26a in the second header tube 22. Like the partition 27a, this partition 26a forms a barrier for the refrigerant, so that the refrigerant cannot flow downward, in the view shown, beyond the partition 26a in the second header tube 22. Instead, it is forced to flow back through a second set of tubes 10b to the first header tube 21. When this occurs, a further heat exchange and further condensation take place.
A further partition 27b is preferably located in the first header tube 21, which forces the refrigerant through a third set of pipes 10c and once again into the second header tube 22. The refrigerant is then again preferably guided by further partitions 26b in the second header tube and 27c in the first header tube back to the first header tube 21, then to the second header tube 22 and back to the first header tube through a fourth set of pipes 10d, a fifth set of pipes 10e and a sixth set of pipes 10f, respectively. From the bottom region of the first header tube 21, separated by the third partition 27c, a tube then leads to the refrigerant outlet 25.
The description above makes it clear why such a condenser is also known as a “serpentine condenser”. This is, of course, because the refrigerant is guided through the condenser through a plurality of loops or meanders. Thus the path covered by the refrigerant in the condenser, in this exemplary embodiment, is quadrupled relative to a parallel flow condenser, depending on the number of sets of tubes.
Particularly preferred is the embodiment shown with a total of six meanders, which thus allows the refrigerant to flow six times through the effective width of the condenser. It is further preferred for the number of tubes 10 to decrease, or at least remain the same, between a first set of tubes 10a to 10e and a further (second) set of tubes 10b to 10f located adjacently downstream. As a result, a declining circuit or flows path of the tube sets is advantageously achieved.
In a particularly preferred embodiment, the first set of tubes 10a comprises 17 tubes, the second set of tubes 10b 10 tubes, the third set of tubes 10c 7 tubes, the fourth set of tubes 10d 6 tubes, the fifth set of tubes 10e 4 tubes and the sixth set of tubes 10f likewise 4 tubes. The effect of this is that the refrigerant medium, which initially is still predominantly in gaseous form, is given comparatively more surface and cross section for heat exchange than the refrigerant downstream which is increasingly in liquid form.
A heat exchanger according to the invention preferably has a width of from 300 to 1000 mm, particularly preferably from approximately 400 to 700 mm, and even more preferably approximately 560 to 600 mm. The overall height is preferably from 200 to 700 mm, more preferably from 400 to 550 mm and particularly preferably from 460 to 500 mm. An embodiment which is particularly preferred for the abovementioned number of tubes in the individual sets of tubes has an effective end surface of approximately 27.8 dm2, giving an effective width of the condenser through which flow takes place of approximately 580 mm and an effective height of approximately 480 mm. A preferred density of fins is 75 fins per dm.
In a preferred embodiment, the elements of the condenser explained above are brazed to one another, yellow-chromed and powder-coated in black in order to optimize the heat exchange even further.
As already discussed in the introduction to the description such a condenser is customarily operated at an operating pressure of 20 bar. A preferred embodiment of a tube or flat tube 10 used in such condensers is shown in an enlarged view in
A tube according to the invention is preferably extruded from aluminum or an aluminum alloy. In this case, the round flow channels may be produced by substantially round dies in an extrusion tool. A round form of the flow channels not only permits optimized heat transfer, especially when the tubes are used in serpentine condensers, but also has great advantages in the production of the tubes. The distortion on extrusion is uniform and minimal, and the wear of the circular dies is much less than if dies of an angular contour were to be used, as in the prior art. Thus a plurality of advantages are obtained simultaneously as a result of the shape of the flow channels.
The right of priority is claimed based on German Patent Application No. 100 54 185.5, filed Nov. 2, 2000, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The foregoing embodiments have been shown for illustrative purposes only and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention which is defined by the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 54 158.5 | Nov 2000 | DE | national |
The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/985,300, filed Nov. 2, 2001, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09985300 | Nov 2001 | US |
Child | 11166342 | Jun 2005 | US |