The present disclosure relates to a condenser for a vehicle air conditioner, and more specifically, to an attachment mechanism for attaching a modulator to a condenser header tank.
The statements in this section merely provide background information related to the present disclosure and may not constitute prior art. Vehicle air conditioning systems commonly employ a condenser that operates in conjunction with a modulator, also known as a receiver or dryer. The condenser cools the high-temperature, high-pressure gas refrigerant sent from a compressor, and condenses it into a liquid refrigerant. The modulator begins separating the gas and liquid refrigerants and sends the primarily liquid refrigerant into a subcooler, which may be located in a bottom portion of the same condenser. In some condenser-modulator arrangements, the modulator is attached to the condenser. While such attachment structures of modulators to condensers have proven satisfactory for their purposes, each is not without its share of limitations.
One such limitation of a current condenser and modulator attachment structure is that flat surfaces found on each of the condenser and modulator requires an intermediate plate to be positioned to braze the flat surfaces together in order to joint them. Another limitation pertains to affixing the intermediate plate, which requires the plate to be crimped or caulked to the modulator and the header tank before brazing. Furthermore, brazing only occurs at the intermediate plate, and not along an extended length of the modulator and header tank.
To best illustrate the shortcomings of the prior art,
Center tabs 18 are used to attach the modulator plate 12 to the modulator 10, while corner tabs 16 are used to attach the modulator plate 12 to the header tank 20.
What is needed then is a device that does not suffer from the above limitations. This, in turn, will provide a device such that: a modulator is connectable to a header tank along an entire length of the modulator; no intermediate plate is necessary between the modulator and header tank to facilitate joining; no crimping or bending of such an intermediate plate is necessary to join the modulator to the header tank; and no special care is necessarily needed to align the modulator and header tank before brazing.
A vehicle air conditioning system has a condenser with a header tank attached to it. A modulator attaches to the header tank using a full-length dove tail joint that is further secured and sealed to the header tank by a brazing process. One configuration of the dove tail joint is to place the recessed dove tail portion in the modulator with the corresponding, protruding dove tail that secures into the recessed portion, in the header tank. A modulator inlet receives gaseous refrigerant from the condenser and discharges liquid refrigerant to a bottom, sub cooler portion of the condenser. The modulator inlet and outlet pass through the dove tail joint of the modulator and header tank.
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.
In accordance with
In the refrigeration cycle R, the compressor 108 discharges a superheated gaseous refrigerant of high temperature and high pressure, which flows into a condenser 114. In the condenser 114, heat exchange is performed with the outside air propelled by a cooling fan 116, so that the refrigerant is cooled for condensing within the condenser 114. The refrigerant condensed in the condenser 114 then flows into a modulator 118, also known as a receiver or dryer, in which the refrigerant is separated into a gas and a liquid. A redundant liquid refrigerant in the refrigeration cycle R is stored inside the modulator 118.
The liquid refrigerant from the modulator 118 is decompressed by an expansion valve 120 into a gas-liquid double phase state of low pressure refrigerant. The low pressure refrigerant from the expansion valve 120 flows into an evaporator 122 by way of an inlet pipe 124. The evaporator 122 is arranged inside an HVAC case 126 of the vehicle air conditioning system 106. The low pressure refrigerant flowing into the evaporator 122 absorbs heat from the air inside the HVAC case 126 for evaporation. An outlet pipe 128 of the evaporator 122 is connected to the suction side of the compressor 108, so that the cycle components mentioned above constitute a closed circuit.
The HVAC case 126 forms a ventilation duct through which air conditioning air is sent into the passenger compartment 130. The HVAC case 126 contains a fan 132 that is arranged on the upstream side of the evaporator 122. An inside/outside air switch box (not shown) is arranged on the suction side of the fan 132 (the left side in
The HVAC case 126 accommodates, on the downstream side of the evaporator 122, a hot water heater core (heat exchanger) 134. The heater core 134 includes an inlet pipe 136 and an outlet pipe 138. Hot water (coolant) of the vehicle engine 102 is directed to the heater core 134 through the inlet pipe 136 by a water pump 140. A water valve 142 controls the flow volume of engine coolant supplied to the heater core 134. A radiator 144 and a thermistor 146 further cooperate to control the temperature of the coolant.
A bypass channel 148 is formed beside the hot water heater core 134. An air mix door 150 is provided to adjust the volume ratio between warm air and cool air that passes through the hot water heater core 134 and the bypass channel 148, respectively. The air mix door 150 adjusts the temperature of the air blown into the passenger compartment 130 by adjusting the volume ratio between the warm air and cool air.
Additionally, a face outlet 152, a foot outlet 154, and a defroster outlet 156 are formed at the downstream end of the HVAC case 126. The face outlet 152 directs air toward the upper body portions of passengers, the foot outlet 154 directs air toward the lower extremities of the passengers, and the defroster outlet 156 directs air toward the internal surface of a vehicle windshield. The outlets 152, 154 and 156 are opened and closed by outlet mode doors (not shown). The air mix door 150 and the outlet mode doors mentioned above are driven by electric driving devices such as servo motors via linkages or the like.
With further reference now to
After passing from the tubes 164 of the upper condenser portion 168 of the condenser 114, the refrigerant passes into a top compartment 186 of the left header tank 158 and then into the modulator 118, which removes moisture from the refrigerant. More specifically, the modulator 118 receives the gaseous and liquid refrigerant through a first modulator port or hole 182 and then discharges liquid refrigerant through a second modulator port or hole 184. The header tank 158 has corresponding holes to facilitate the refrigerant transfer. In the modulator 118 the gaseous refrigerant 170 continues to condense into liquid refrigerant 172. The liquid refrigerant 172 then passes from the modulator 118 back into a bottom compartment 188 of the left header tank 158 before passing into a lower subcooler portion 178 of the condenser 114. Generally, the upper condenser portion 168 and subcooler portion 178 together form the core of the condenser 114. Upon exiting the subcooler portion 178 and passing into the right header tank 160, the liquid refrigerant passes from the condenser at a condenser outlet 180. Because the left header tank 158 is divided into an upper compartment 186 and a lower compartment 188, the upper compartment 186 discharges the liquid and gaseous refrigerant into the modulator 118, while the lower compartment 188 receives mostly liquid refrigerant from the modulator 118. Similarly, because the right header tank 160 is also divided into an upper compartment 190 and a lower compartment 192, the upper compartment 190 receives gaseous refrigerant before cooling and condensing, while the lower compartment 192 receives liquid refrigerant from the subcooler portion 178 after cooling and condensing.
Regarding more specific details of the invention, the joining of the modulator 118 to the left header tank 158 will now be discussed.
Because the modulator 118 is brazed to the header tank 158, before beginning the mechanical dove tail connection, a brazing compound is placed on either the dove tail recession 194 of the modulator 118 or the dove tail projection 198 of the header tank 158. Upon successfully completing the mechanical, dove tail joining of the modulator 118 to the header tank 158, the parts may then be brazed together in a brazing process, such as in a brazing furnace. In such brazing process in accordance with the aluminum part examples provided, the melting point of the brazing alloy is lower than the aluminum modulator and aluminum header tank. The dove tail joint 159 is designed such that proper capillarity of the braze metal is facilitated to provide proper strength between the brazed modulator and header tank. The dove tail joint 159 of
While the above description and
The description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the invention. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention.