Claims
- 1. In an Electrothermodynamic heat/electric power converter, a converter body, a carrier gas-vapor having a subsonic velocity under pressure in said converter body, a source of superheated vapor, a micro orifice nozzle, the throat of said micro orifice nozzle having a diameter D.sub.o, said superheated vapor being supplied to said micro orifice nozzle, a jet of supercooled vapor issuing from said micro orifice nozzle, an ion source comprising an emitter point, a charging electrode in proximity to said emitter point, a collector point electrode, an electrical load connected between said emitter and said collector, said jet issuing from said nozzle at a supersonic velocity, thereby forming an expanding jet having a conical boundary between said expanding jet and said gas-vapor, the apex of said conical boundary being a distance a.sub.o to the said throat diameter D.sub.o of said micro orifice nozzle, said boundary making a half apex angle .theta. to the axis of said jet, said angle .theta. being between 10.degree. to 50.degree. as a function of the Mach Number of the jet 1.4<M<2.4 ions from said ion source being emitted within an ion cone into the supercooled vapor of said jet, said ion cone having a half apex angle .alpha., a charged aerosol formed by condensation of the said supercooled vapor in said jet onto said ions at the entrance plane z=a, the kinetic power density of the said supersonic jet being thereby decreased from z=a.sub.o to z=a by a factor of 10.sup.4 >(a/a.sub.o).sup.2 >10.sup.2, said charged aerosol being established within said conical boundary layer between said entrance plane at z-a and an exit plant at z=b, said distances a and b being measured from said apex, ions of a sign opposite to that of said charged aerosol, said charged aerosols being discharged at the plane z-b by said ions of opposite sign emitted from said collector point, said charged aerosol having a charged density which decreases according to (z/a).sup.m from z=a to z=b, where m is a negative exponential number -2<m<0, the power conversion in said cone between z=a and z=b being increased by the factor 40>.GAMMA.>1; whereby a substantial proportion of the heat kinetic power of said supersonic jet is directly converted to electrical power within said jet, at increased current, decreased voltage and increased conversion space length L=b-a, compared to constant charge density conversion, for which m=0.
- 2. An Electrothermodynamic power converter according to claim 1, in which the velocity of said charged aerosol decreases inversely as (z/a).sup.(m-2) between z=a and z=b, as the kinetic power is converted to electrical power, and as the area of the cone increases according to (z/a).sup.2.
- 3. In an Electrothermodynamic power converter according to claim 1, said conical supersonic jet being surrounded by said carrier gas-vapor comprising hydrogen and an additive vapor to increase the electrical breakdown strength.
- 4. An Electrothermodynamic power converter according to claim 1, wherein said jet is a supersonic steam jet, and said charged aerosol is formed by condensation onto said ions.
- 5. An Electrothermodynamic power converter according to claim 1, in which said heat/electric electrothermodynamic converter is in a supercritical Rankine cycle, said superheated vapor being supercritical.
- 6. In an Electrothermodynamic power converter according to claim 1, a plurality of said micro orifice nozzles forming parallel jets in an array.
- 7. In an Electrothermodynamic power converter according to claim 1, said subsonic carrier gas surrounding said conical jet travelling parallel to said jet at the boundary layer, but having a return flow in the opposite direction forming a toroidal convection cell in the configuration of a TORON without walls.
- 8. In an Electrothermodynamic power converter according to claim 1, a plurality of said jets and said convection cells which are in parallel.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 06/237,290, filed 2/23/81, entitled "Electrothermodynamic (ETD) Power Converter" now U.S. Pat. No. 4,395,648, 7/26/83.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
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Country |
Parent |
237290 |
Feb 1981 |
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