Emission concerns associated with the operation of internal combustion engines (e.g., diesel and other types of engines) have resulted in an increased emphasis on the use of exhaust gas heat exchangers. These heat exchangers are often used as part of an exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) system, in which a portion of an engine's exhaust is returned to the combustion chambers. Such a system displaces some of the oxygen that would ordinarily be inducted into the engine as part of the fresh combustion air charge with the inert gases of the recirculated exhaust gas. The presence of the inert exhaust gas typically serves to lower the combustion temperature, thereby reducing the rate of NOx formation.
In order to achieve the foregoing, it is desirable for the temperature of the recirculated exhaust to be lowered prior to the exhaust being delivered into the intake manifold of the engine. In the usual case, engine coolant is used to cool the exhaust gas within the exhaust gas heat exchanger in order to achieve the desired reduction in temperature. The use of engine coolant provides certain advantages in that appropriate structure for subsequently rejecting heat from the engine coolant to the ambient air is already available for use in most applications requiring an EGR system.
Due in large part to the elevated temperatures of the exhaust gas that they encounter, exhaust gas coolers are known to be prone to thermal cycle failure. The desire for increased fuel economy continues to drive the engine operating temperatures upward, further exacerbating the problem. Above a certain temperature, the material properties of the metals used to produce the heat exchanger rapidly degrade, and the operational lifetime of the heat exchanger is substantially reduced. In order to combat this problem, it often becomes necessary either for the heat exchanger to be produced of more expensive alloys that can withstand these higher temperatures, or to increase the size and weight of the heat exchanger using the current materials, neither of which is desirable. Thus, there is still room for improvement.
An exhaust gas cooler according to an embodiment of the invention includes tubes to convey an exhaust gas through the cooler, a header plate to receive ends of the tubes, and a diffuser. The diffuser and the header plate together define an inlet plenum for the exhaust gas. The diffuser includes a connection flange to join the diffuser to the header plate, and the connection flange is substantially shielded from the flow of exhaust gas passing through the inlet plenum.
According to some embodiments, the diffuser includes an inlet end to receive the exhaust gas into the cooler and an outlet end to deliver the exhaust gas to the tubes. A diffuser body extends between the inlet end and the outlet end, and the connection flange is connected to the diffuser body at a location between the inlet end and the outlet end. In some such embodiments that location is between five millimeters and twenty millimeters from the outlet end. In some embodiments the connection flange includes a first portion extending out from the diffuser body, and a second portion connected to the first portion and oriented at an angle to the first portion.
In some embodiments, the diffuser includes a first component at least partially defining the diffuser body, and a second component joined to the first component and at least partially defining the connection flange. In some such embodiments the second component at least partially defines the diffuser body. The second component can be a formed sheet metal component in some embodiments. The second component can have a U-shaped, an L-shaped, or a Z-shaped profile in some embodiments.
According to another embodiment of the invention, an exhaust gas cooler has tubes to convey an exhaust gas flow, a header plate to receive ends of the tubes, and a diffuser. The diffuser includes an inlet end to receive the exhaust gas into the cooler, an outlet end to deliver the exhaust gas to the plurality of tubes, a diffuser body extending between the inlet end and the outlet, and a connection flange to join the diffuser to the header plate. The connection flange is located externally from the diffuser body and is connected thereto at a location between the inlet end and the outlet end.
In some embodiments the joint between the connection flange and the header plate defines a continuous leak-free seal for the exhaust gas. In some embodiments the location between the inlet end and the outlet end is between five millimeters and twenty millimeters from the outlet end.
In some embodiments the connection flange defines a conduction path length between the diffuser body and the header plate, and that conduction path length is at least three times the mean thickness of the connection flange. In some embodiments the connection flange and the diffuser body are an integral casting. In some embodiments the connection flange is joined to the header plate by a continuous weld joint, and in some such embodiments the continuous weld joint additionally joins an end of a housing surrounding the tubes to the header plate.
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 accompanying drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including,” “comprising,” or “having” and variations thereof herein is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items. Unless specified or limited otherwise, the terms “mounted,” “connected,” “supported,” and “coupled” and variations thereof are used broadly and encompass both direct and indirect mountings, connections, supports, and couplings. Further, “connected” and “coupled” are not restricted to physical or mechanical connections or couplings.
An exhaust gas cooler 1 according to an embodiment of the invention is depicted in
The tubes 9 extend between a header plate 10 arranged at one end of the heat exchanger core 8, and a header plate 12 arranged at the opposing end of the heat exchanger core 8. Each of the header plates 10, 12 include a series of slots 16 sized and arranged so as to be compatible with ends of the tubes 9, so that respective ends of the tubes 9 can be received into the slots 16. Once received into the header plates 10 and 12, the ends of the tubes 9 are joined to the header plates 10 and 12 to provide a leak free path for the exhaust gas between the header plates.
The heat exchanger core 8 can in some embodiments be provided as a brazed assembly of the tubes 9, baffles 11, and header plates 10 and 12. Inserts (not shown) can optionally be provided within the tubes 9 in order to increase the heat transfer surface area, the heat transfer coefficient, or both.
An inlet diffuser 3 is joined to the header plate 10, and provides a flow path to deliver the exhaust gas to the ends of the tubes 9 received into the header plate 10. Similarly, an outlet diffuser 4 is joined to the header plate 12, and provides a flow path for the exhaust from the ends of the tubes 9 received into the header plate 12 to an exhaust outlet 17. The inlet diffuser 3 and outlet diffuser 4 can be coupled within an exhaust system to provide a flow of exhaust through the exhaust cooler 1.
The casing 2 is provided in two parts 2a and 2b, which are joined to the heat exchanger core 8 in order to provide a sealed volume for the flow of coolant. Alternatively, the casing 2 can be provided as a single component into which the heat exchanger core 8 is inserted. Coolant inlet and outlet ports 5 and 6 are provided in the casing in order to deliver the coolant into, and remove the coolant from, the cooler 1. The coolant can pass through the cooler 1 in a counter-flow orientation to the exhaust gas by having the port 6 function as the coolant inlet port and the port 5 as the coolant outlet port, or in a concurrent-flow orientation by having the port 5 function as the coolant inlet port and the port 6 as the coolant outlet port. In other embodiments the ports 5 and 6 can be alternately arranged to achieve other flow orientations such as, for example, cross-flow or combinations of counter-flow, concurrent-flow, and/or cross-flow.
Turning now to the inlet diffuser 3 in more detail, and with specific reference to
The diffuser 3 further includes a connection flange 15 joined to the diffuser body 14 at a location between the inlet end 7 and the outlet end 13. The location between the inlet end 7 and the outlet end 13 at which the connection flange 15 joins to the diffuser body 14 can vary, but is preferably closer to the outlet end 13 than to the inlet end 7. In some especially preferable embodiments that location is between five millimeters and 20 millimeters from the outlet end 13. The connection flange 15 extends continuously around the periphery of the diffuser 3 and is joined to the header 10 by brazing, welding, or other joining processes known in the art. In some embodiments the connection flange 15 can be joined to the header 10 in a removable or serviceable manner, such as by a gasketed mechanical joint. In any event, it is desirable for the joint between the connection flange 15 and the header 10 to define a continuous leak-free seal for the exhaust gas, so that the diffuser 3 and the header 10 together define an inlet plenum for the exhaust gas into which the open ends of the tubes 9 extend.
As best seen in
The casing 2 is also joined to the outer periphery of the header plate 10. This joint between the casing 2 and the header plate 10 can, in some embodiments, be combined with the joint between the header plate 10 and the diffuser 3 to define a single joint. For example, a single continuous weld bead can be used to join all three components simultaneously. Alternatively, a clamped joint can be used that captures the header plate 10 between the casing 2 on the one side, and the connection flange 15 of the diffuser on the other.
When the exhaust gas cooler 1 is used in an EGR system, high temperature recirculated exhaust gas from the exhaust manifold of the engine is directed through the array of tubes 9, and is cooled by engine coolant circulating over the array of tubes 9. In typical diesel engine applications the temperature of the exhaust gas is reduced from an inlet temperature of 600-700° C. to an outlet temperature of 100-150° C., while the temperature of the coolant is maintained at a fairly uniform temperature of approximately 90° C. by providing a sufficiently high coolant flow rate through the exhaust gas cooler 1. Maintaining such a high coolant flow rate is preferable so that undesirable boiling of the liquid coolant is prevented.
As a consequence of the high coolant flow rate, the temperatures of those portions of the exhaust gas cooler that are exposed to the coolant are held to a temperature that is fairly close to the coolant temperature. For example, the casing 2 is able to be maintained at a temperature that is approximately the coolant temperature. The header plate 10, while exposed to the hot incoming exhaust on one side, is aggressively cooled by the coolant passing over the opposing surface, and is likewise maintained at a temperature that is substantially nearer to the coolant temperature than it is to the incoming exhaust gas temperature, especially at those portions of the header plate 10 that are furthest removed from the exhaust gas conveying tubes 9.
By contrast, the inlet diffuser 3, being directly exposed to the hot incoming exhaust gas but not at all to the coolant, reaches temperatures that are substantially higher than those portions of the cooler previously mentioned. In previously known configurations of EGR coolers, which lack the connection flange 15 of the exhaust gas cooler 1, the diffuser body is typically connected directly to the header plate. With such a configuration that portion of the diffuser body that is directly connected to the header plate is cooled by the conduction of heat from the diffuser to the aggressively cooled header plate, but the diffuser is still heated, by the flow of exhaust gas passing therethrough, to a substantially higher temperature than is the header plate. This substantially higher temperature of the diffuser relative to the header plate likewise leads to a substantially greater thermal expansion of the diffuser relative to the header plate, resulting in mechanical strain being produced in the header plate. This mechanical strain tends to be greatest at the intersection of the exhaust tubes and the header plate due to geometric stress concentrations occurring at these intersections.
EGR coolers are known to be highly susceptible to thermal fatigue induced failure modes. The flow of exhaust gas through an EGR cooler tends to vary somewhat directly with the engine output, and highly cyclic patterns of exhaust gas flow can result from typically encountered driving patterns. While the temperatures of those portions of the EGR cooler that are aggressively cooled by the coolant (e.g. the casing 2 and the header plate 10, among others) are maintained at a fairly constant temperature, the inlet diffuser can be alternately aggressively heated by the flowing exhaust gas and rapidly cooled by conduction in the absence of high exhaust gas flow. This cyclic behavior, and the resulting variation in mechanical strain in the header plate, is known to lead to thermal stress fatigue of the EGR cooler, and eventual failure of the device.
In contradistinction to the above described behavior of previously known configurations of EGR coolers, an exhaust gas cooler 1 according to embodiments of the present invention has an inlet diffuser body 14 that is thermally coupled to the header plate 10 in a less direct fashion. The connection flange 15 provides a more resistive thermal conduction path from the diffuser body 14 to the header plate 10. As a result, the diffuser body 14 is maintained at an elevated temperature near to the incoming exhaust gas temperature over its entire length during those portions of the cycle where exhaust gas is flowing through the cooler 1 at a high rate. This increased temperature tends to result in slightly higher mechanical strain values in the header plate 10 than are found in the previously known EGR coolers. However, during periods of low exhaust gas flow, the more resistive thermal conduction path that is provided by the connection flange leads to a lower rate of cooling of the diffuser body. Consequently, the cyclic variation in mechanical strain is reduced. Calculations have shown that the strain range (i.e. the variation in mechanical strain between the high exhaust flow condition and the low exhaust flow condition) at the tube to header intersection can be reduced by as much as 25%, which can lead to a substantial increase in the expected life of the cooler.
In order to maximize the beneficial effect of the diffuser 3, the inner surfaces 19 of the connection flange 15 should be shielded as much as possible from the direct heating effects of the exhaust gas passing through the diffuser 3. To that end, it can be beneficial for the outlet end 13 of the diffuser body 14 to be located in close proximity to the header plate 10 so that relatively little of the exhaust gas flow passes through the resulting gap to the surfaces 19. In some embodiments the end 13 can be made to directly abut the header plate 10, while in other embodiments the end 13 needs to be spaced back in order to accommodate for the extension of the ends of the tubes 9 beyond the plane of the header plate 10. Tabs 20 (
The thermal resistance value of a heat conducting body is known to be directly proportional to the length of the thermal conduction path, and inversely proportional to the thickness of the body. In order to ensure that the thermal conduction path through the connection flange 15 is of sufficiently high resistance, in some especially preferable embodiments the length of that conduction path between the diffuser body 14 and the header plate 10 is substantially greater than the thickness of the connection flange. As an example, in some embodiments (such as the embodiment of
The diffuser 3 of the embodiment of
The embodiments of
The diffuser 203 shown in
In the embodiment of
The alternative embodiment of
Yet another embodiment of the diffuser 3 is illustrated in
Various alternatives to the certain features and elements of the present invention are described with reference to specific embodiments of the present invention. With the exception of features, elements, and manners of operation that are mutually exclusive of or are inconsistent with each embodiment described above, it should be noted that the alternative features, elements, and manners of operation described with reference to one particular embodiment are applicable to the other embodiments.
The embodiments described above and illustrated in the figures are presented by way of example only and are not intended as a limitation upon the concepts and principles of the present invention. As such, it will be appreciated by one having ordinary skill in the art that various changes in the elements and their configuration and arrangement are possible without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/837,736, filed on Jun. 21, 2013, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
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