This application claims priority to German Patent Application No. DE 10 2013 002 545.1, filed Feb. 14, 2013, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein.
The invention relates to a condenser with at least one stack of heat exchanger plates, which has a first section for condensation of a refrigerant and a second section for supercooling of the refrigerant, in which case at least one flow channel for the refrigerant and at least one other flow channel for a liquid coolant stream are formed between the heat exchanger plates in each section, which are in a heat-exchanging relation, the stack being perforated by inflow and outflow channels for the coolant stream and for the refrigerant, which are hydraulically connected to at least one or the other flow channel.
Such a condenser can be used in air conditioning systems of vehicles.
The liquid coolant in U.S. Pat. No. 7,469,554 B2 enters the second section, flows through it and in so doing supercools the already condensed refrigerant. The coolant then flows with an already somewhat increased temperature through the first section in order to condense the refrigerant.
It is proposed in DE 10 2011 008 429 A1 to traverse the first and/or second section with a coolant having a lower temperature. This permits a performance improvement of the condenser. However, the system costs are quite high, since a cooling loop must be equipped accordingly in order to furnish coolant at a lower temperature.
The task of the invention includes a performance improvement of such condensers without having to equip the coolant loop and without having to make corresponding investments.
It is important according to some aspects of the invention that the coolant stream within the condenser is divisible into a coolant main stream and at least one coolant partial stream. To implement this aspect it is further proposed that a throttle-like device be arranged in the inlet channel for the coolant stream to divert the partial stream from the coolant entering the condenser. The partial stream serves for supercooling of the refrigerant in the second section, i.e., it traverses the at least one other flow channel of the second section, namely the supercooling section of the condenser.
The coolant main stream can enter the at least one other flow channel of the first section and effectively perform condensation of the refrigerant without already being significantly heated beforehand.
In a variant according to the invention it is proposed that the partial stream can be fed back to the inlet channel by at least a second other flow channel in the second section. The partial stream therefore covers at least a U-shaped path within the second section or the supercooling section.
In terms of design it can be advantageous in this context that a cutoff be arranged in the outflow channel for the coolant stream, which forces the coolant stream to traverse at least a second other flow channel in the second section. Instead of cutoff, another connection could also be provided between the first other flow channel and the second other flow channel at their ends, which, however, may be somewhat more cumbersome, since the other flow channels in this case must not discharge into the outflow channel.
Some advantages are expected from this embodiment because the still relatively cool coolant has a fairly high temperature difference relative to the refrigerant. Because the partial stream is fed back to the inlet channel the entire coolant stream can then flow through the first section and be used for condensation of the refrigerant.
According to some embodiments according to the invention, the partial stream, after traversing the supercooling section and the at least one other flow channel, discharges directly into the outflow channel for the coolant stream and leaves the condenser through it, together with the main stream of the coolant coming from the first section. Here again there is a higher temperature difference that can lead to performance improvements.
The performance improvement of the condenser is expected without having to provide a low temperature cooling loop. The system costs will be comparatively low.
Naturally the condenser according to the invention can also be installed in cooling systems, for example, in or of vehicles which are equipped anyway with a low temperature cooling loop for other reasons. In these cases, at least the direct connection costs of the condenser can be reduced, since lines from this loop to the condenser and back again are not required.
The invention is described with reference to the appended drawings in three practical examples. This description contains additional features that might turn out later to be beneficial to the invention.
Other aspects of the invention will become apparent by consideration of the detailed description and accompanying drawings.
The appended figures can be understood as sections through a condenser.
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways.
The condenser according to
An inflow channel 4 for refrigerant RF, which is formed by means of openings in plates 1 and extends through the plate stack, is connected via the flow channels 2 to an outflow channel 5 for refrigerant also extending through the plate stack (
Corresponding connectors 21 are soldered to the cover plates 9, 11 on the inflow channel 6 for coolant KM and on the outflow channel 7. Other connections 22 are provided for refrigerant RF on the inflow and outflow channels 4, 5.
As is also apparent from
With the practical example according to
The two flow channels 2 for refrigerant RF are then separated by means of the mentioned partitions 14, viewed hydraulically, from the stack, which are situated in corresponding positions in the inflow and outflow channels 4, 5 for refrigerant, as is readily apparent from
The practical examples according to
Generally speaking, the vane 8a is always situated roughly at half-height h of the second section 20. Cutoff 12a is situated, on the other hand, in a position that corresponds to roughly height h of the second section 20. Height h in the drawings corresponds roughly to the plate area shown by the braces and the reference number 20 (see
In contrast to
The coolant main stream in the practical examples (viewed in its flow direction) enters the flow channels 3 of the first section 10 with even lower temperature beyond the throttle-like device 8a.
It is also possible to split off the coolant partial stream KMT outside the condenser but preferably in its immediate vicinity from the coolant stream KM and to feed it separately into the second section 20, which was not shown. Flow through the condenser by means of the main stream and partial stream KMT then remains unchanged.
Finally, it should be mentioned that the condenser can be also traversed meander-like by arranging additional cutoffs 12 and partitions 14 in the inflow and outflow channels 4-7 in the first and second sections 10, 20, so that it has corresponding subsections. The arrows in the figures of the practical examples, on the other hand, show that only simple flow and in the second section 20, preferably also, U-shaped flow are provided.
In condensers that use air as coolant and which ordinarily have plate stacks that do not form flow channels, but a tube-rib stack, a meander-like flow can also occur on the refrigerant side in one or both sections 10, 20. The ribs represent flow channels for the cooling air and the tubes are flow channels for the refrigerant RF. The partitions 14 forming the mentioned subsections for deflection of the refrigerant are situated in collecting tubes arranged on the tube ends.
Various features and advantages of the invention are set forth in the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102013002545.1 | Feb 2013 | DE | national |