Claims
- 1. A heater for fluids, the heater comprising:
a conduit having a wall and a surface, the conduit being configured to convey a fluid; the conduit wherein the surface is roughened to secure a coating thereto; and a conductor, configured to be electrically resistive and to extend over at least a portion of a roughened surface, and to adhere thereto by micro-mechanical gripping in response to stresses induced by differentials in respective coefficients of thermal expansion thereof.
- 2. The heater of claim 1, wherein the conduit is formed of a high purity, substantially non-reactive material.
- 3. The heater of claim 1, wherein the conduit material is fused quartz.
- 4. The heater of claim 1, wherein the conduit is formed of a material that is electrically non-conducting.
- 5. The heater of claim 1, wherein the wall has a thickness, a thermal conductivity, and a strength, and wherein the thickness is selected to balance heat transfer due to the thermal conductivity against durability due to the strength.
- 6. The heater of claim 1, wherein the heater is configured to provide an arbitrary power density and associated output power, controlled by selectively setting values of a voltage rating, diameter, length, coating thickness, coating material, coating resistivity, and variation in resistivity as a function of temperature.
- 7. The heater of claim 1, wherein the coating has a thickness selected to provide a specified uniformity of electrical resistivity therein.
- 8. The heater of claim 1, wherein the coating has a thickness selected to control electrical resistance therein.
- 9. The heater of claim 1, wherein the coating has a thickness selected to provide a selected resistance calculated based on a heat-treating thereof.
- 10. The heater of claim 1, wherein the conduit further comprises a high purity, non-reactive material for conducting the fluid maintained in a highly purified condition
- 11. The heater of claim 1, further comprising an anti-oxidation coat over at least a portion of the coating to reduce oxidation at elevated temperatures.
- 12. The heater of claim 1, wherein the conductor is configured to provide electrical resistance heating by conduction from the surface through the wall to the fluid flowing thereagainst.
- 13. The heater of claim 12, wherein the conductor is configured to adhere by mechanical clamping of a plurality of inclusions in the roughened surface.
- 14. The heater of claim 13, wherein the roughened surface is characterized by a roughness height, selected to maintain mechanical integrity of the conduit.
- 15. The heater of claim 14, wherein the roughness height is further selected to balance a value of heat transfer through the wall, mechanical integrity of the conduit, and adhesion of the coating, all at operational levels.
- 16. The heater of claim 15, wherein the coating is formed of a substantially metallic material deposited at a thickness selected to balance resistivity and mechanical adhesion to the roughened surface.
- 17. The heater of claim 16, wherein the metallic material is a composition containing nickel.
- 18. The heater of claim 16, wherein the metallic material is deposited at a thickness characteristic of a process selected from spraying, sintering, flame spraying, vapor deposition, sputtering, electroless plating, and electrolytic plating.
- 19. The heater of claim 18, further comprising a termination zone comprising a region of reduced electrical resistance for distributing electrical current to the coating.
- 20. The heater of claim 19, wherein the termination zone is configured to have a resistance substantially less than a resistance of the coating.
- 21. The heater of claim 20, further comprising a conformal coating for rendering the coating non-reactive to an ambient environment.
- 22. The heater of claim 21, wherein the conduit is formed of a dielectric material.
- 23. The heater of claim 22, wherein the conduit is formed of crystalline material.
- 24. The heater of claim 23, wherein the crystalline material is fused quartz.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This Patent Application is a continuation in part of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/179,541 filed on Feb. 1, 2000.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60179541 |
Feb 2000 |
US |