Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an expander.
Description of the Related Art
A power generation apparatus disclosed in Japanese Patent No. 4684882 includes an expander, a generator, and a cooling medium pump which are disposed in order from the downside toward the upside and are integrated with one another.
The expander includes a rotary scroll that is rotated by the expansion of a vapor cooling medium flowing into a working chamber. The generator includes a motor shaft that is connected to the rotary scroll through a shaft and a rotor that is attached to the motor shaft. In the generator, power is generated by the rotation of the motor shaft and the rotor using the rotational movement of the rotary scroll transmitted through the shaft. A bearing that supports the motor shaft is provided inside a housing of the generator.
A vapor cooling medium including lubricant is introduced into the working chamber. The vapor cooling medium that has been used to rotate the rotary scroll flows to the upper portion of the generator through a discharge gas passage formed in the housing of the generator, and flows into the housing. At this time, the flow velocity of the vapor cooling medium decreases with an increase in the size of the passage, and hence the lubricant is separated from the cooling medium. The separated lubricant falls to the space inside the housing, further flows and falls while being supplied to the bearing or the like, and then is accumulated in an oil reservoir between the housing and the rotary scroll. The lubricant that is accumulated in the oil reservoir is pumped toward the cooling medium pump through a shaft passage formed inside the shaft, is used to lubricate each component, and is discharged to the outside along with a liquid cooling medium while being dissolved in the liquid cooling medium.
In the expander of the related art, since the lubricant flows and falls from the bearing to the oil reservoir, there is a case in which oil shortage may occur in the bearing during the activation of the expander. Accordingly, there is a concern that the bearing may be damaged or the durability of the bearing may be degraded. Further, since the oil reservoir is formed between the housing and the rotary scroll and the cooling medium pump is provided to discharge the cooling medium and the lubricant having been used for the lubrication, the configuration of the expander becomes complicated, and the manufacturing cost increases.
The present invention is made to solve the above-described problems, and an object thereof is to suppress the damage and the degradation in durability of the bearing of the expander, simplify the configuration of the expander, and reduce the manufacturing cost thereof.
In order to attain the above-described object, an expander according to the present invention includes: a casing that includes therein an expansion chamber into which lubricant and vapor of a working medium are introduced; an expander rotor that is rotationally driven by an expanding force transmitted from the vapor of the working medium introduced into the expansion chamber; a first bearing that supports a rotation shaft of the expander rotor to a working medium feeding port of the expansion chamber so that the expander rotor is rotatable; a second bearing that supports the rotation shaft of the expander rotor to a working medium lead-out port of the expansion chamber so that the expander rotor is rotatable; a first bearing chamber that is provided inside the casing and accommodates the first bearing, the pressure inside the first bearing chamber being lower than that of the feeding port of the expansion chamber; and a lubricant passage that connects a position above a lowermost portion of the first bearing in the first bearing chamber to a low-pressure portion having a pressure lower than that of the first bearing chamber.
In the expander, since the pressure of the first bearing chamber is lower than that of the feeding port of the expansion chamber, a part of the lubricant and the working medium introduced into the expansion chamber through the feeding port flow into the first bearing chamber. Then, since the passage that leads the lubricant from the first bearing chamber to the low-pressure portion is connected to the first bearing chamber at a position above the lowermost portion of the first bearing, the lubricant remains in the lowermost portion of the first bearing even when the lubricant is discharged through the passage inside the first bearing chamber. For this reason, the oil shortage of the first bearing may be prevented during the activation of the expander, and hence the damage and the degradation in durability of the first bearing may be suppressed. Further, in the expander, since the lubricant having been used to lubricate the first bearing is discharged to the low-pressure portion having a pressure lower than that of the first bearing chamber through the passage in the first bearing chamber due to the pressure difference, there is no need to provide an oil reservoir for accumulating the lubricant inside the casing and a pump for discharging the lubricant. For this reason, the configuration of the expander may be simplified, and the manufacturing cost thereof may be reduced.
In the expander, a shaft seal that seals the outer periphery of the rotation shaft may be provided at a position between the first bearing chamber and the expansion chamber inside the casing, and a lower end of an end of the lubricant passage may be located below a lowermost portion of the shaft seal.
According to this configuration, it is possible to prevent the lubricant from being accumulated to a position equal to or higher than the lowermost portion of the shaft seal even when the lubricant is accumulated in the first bearing chamber. For this reason, it is possible to suppress the loss of the power caused by the agitation of the lubricant during the rotation of the rotor with an excessive increase in the amount of the lubricant accumulated in the first bearing chamber.
In this case, an end of the lubricant passage may be connected to a side portion of the first bearing chamber.
In the expander, the expansion chamber may include an intermediate portion that is located between the working medium feeding port with respect to the expansion chamber and the working medium lead-out port from the expansion chamber and has an intermediate pressure between the feeding port and the lead-out port, and the low-pressure portion may be the intermediate portion.
According to this configuration, the lubricant having been used to lubricate the first bearing may be returned from the first bearing chamber to the intermediate portion of the expansion chamber through the lubricant passage. Accordingly, the lubricant returned to the intermediate portion may be used to lubricate the expander rotor.
In the expander, a second bearing chamber that has a pressure lower than that of the first bearing chamber and accommodates the second bearing may be provided inside the casing, and the low-pressure portion may be the second bearing chamber.
According to this configuration, the lubricant having been used to lubricate the first bearing may be used to lubricate the second bearing while being supplied from the first bearing chamber to the second bearing chamber through the lubricant passage.
In the expander, the casing may be provided with a discharge port that has a pressure lower than that of the first bearing chamber and discharges the working medium discharged from the lead-out port of the expansion chamber to the outside of the casing, and the low-pressure portion may be the discharge port.
According to this configuration, the lubricant having been used to lubricate the first bearing may be discharged from the first bearing chamber the outside of the casing through the lubricant passage along with the working medium from the expansion chamber.
The expander may further include a pair of expander rotors including the expander rotor, a pair of the first bearings that supports the rotation shafts of the pair of expander rotors, wherein the casing may include therein a pair of the first bearing chambers respectively accommodating the pair of first bearings and a communication passage causing the pair of first bearing chambers to communicate with each other, and the communication passage may be located above the lowermost portion of each first bearing.
According to this configuration, it is possible to prevent the oil shortage in the pair of first bearings during the activation of the expander including the pair of expander rotors, and hence to suppress the damage and the degradation in durability of the pair of first bearings.
As described above, according to the present invention, it is possible to suppress the damage and the degradation in durability of the bearing of the expander, simplify the configuration of the expander, and reduce the manufacturing cost thereof.
Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present invention will be described with reference to the drawings.
Although the detailed structure of the power generation apparatus 2 will be described below, the power generation apparatus 2 includes a screw-type expander 14 and a generator 16. In the power generation apparatus 2, expander rotors 32a and 32b to be described later in the expander 14 are rotationally driven by an expanding force of vapor of a working medium, and power is generated by the rotation of a generator rotor 38 to be described later in the generator 16 with the rotation of the expander rotors 32a and 32b.
The circulation flow passage 4 causes a discharge port 44b and an inlet 44a of the power generation apparatus 2 to communicate with each other. Lubricant and vapor of the working medium having been used for the power generation are discharged from the discharge port 44b of the power generation apparatus 2. The circulation flow passage 4 leads a mixed fluid of the lubricant and the vapor of the working medium discharged from the discharge port 44b to the inlet 44a.
The condenser 6 is provided in the circulation flow passage 4. The condenser 6 cools the mixed fluid that is discharged from the discharge port 44b to the circulation flow passage 4 and flows into the condenser 6 while exchanging the heat of the mixture fluid with low-temperature cooling water so as to condense the vapor of the working medium in the mixed fluid. Accordingly, the mixed fluid that is discharged from the condenser 6 is obtained by mixing the liquid-phase working medium with the lubricant.
The circulation pump 8 is provided at the downstream position of the condenser 6 in the circulation flow passage 4. The circulation pump 8 pressure-feeds the mixed fluid discharged from the condenser 6 toward the downstream side.
The evaporator 10 is provided at the downstream position of the circulation pump 8 in the circulation flow passage 4. The evaporator 10 exchanges heat between a heating medium supplied to the evaporator 10 and the mixed fluid pressure-fed from the circulation pump 8 so as to evaporate the working medium in the mixed fluid. Furthermore, as the heating medium, an exhaust gas of a vehicle, hot water, or steam is used. Accordingly, the mixed fluid that is discharged from the evaporator 10 and is supplied to the inlet 44a of the power generation apparatus 2 is obtained by mixing the vapor of the working medium with the liquid-phase lubricant.
In the power generation system, a circulation circuit is formed such that the working medium is supplied from the evaporator 10 to the power generation apparatus 2 through the circulation flow passage 4, the working medium that is discharged from the power generation apparatus 2 to the circulation flow passage 4 is supplied to the condenser 6, the working medium that is supplied to the condenser 6 returns to the evaporator 10 through the circulation pump 8. Since the working medium is circulated in the circulation circuit of the power generation system, electric energy is generated from the exhaust heat.
Next, a configuration of the power generation apparatus 2 of this embodiment will be described in detail.
As shown in
The casing 12 forms the outer surface of the power generation apparatus 2, and is provided so as to extend in the horizontal direction. The casing 12 includes an expander casing 30 that accommodates the expander 14 therein and a generator casing 31 that accommodates the generator 16 therein. The expander casing 30 and the generator casing 31 are fastened to each other so as to form the casing 12.
The expander casing 30 includes an expander casing body 41, an expander casing inlet-side portion 42, and a cover portion 43. The generator casing 31, the expander casing body 41, and the expander casing inlet-side portion 42 are arranged in series in the horizontal direction. The expander casing body 41 is fastened to the generator casing 31, and the expander casing inlet-side portion 42 is fastened to the expander casing body 41. The cover portion 43 is attached to the end opposite to the expander casing body 41 in the expander casing inlet-side portion 42. The cover portion 43 seals an opening formed in the end of the expander casing inlet-side portion 42.
As shown in
Further, a vapor inlet 45a communicating with the inlet 44a and a vapor outlet 45b communicating with the discharge port 44b are provided inside the expander casing body 41. The vapor inlet 45a is a feeding port through which the vapor of the working medium flows into an expansion chamber 51 to be described later, and the vapor outlet 45b is a lead-out port through which the vapor of the working medium flows from the expansion chamber 51. The vapor inlet 45a is provided in the end distant from the generator 16 in the expander rotors 32a and 32b, and the vapor outlet 45b is provided in the end close to the generator 16 in the expander rotors 32a and 32b. The expander casing body 41 includes a partition wall 50 that is formed between the discharge port 44b and the space on the generator 16 side. The partition wall 50 is provided with a communication port 50a that causes the space inside the discharge port 44b to communicate with the space on the generator 16 side.
As shown in
A spiral tooth is formed in each outer peripheral portion of the expander rotors 32a and 32b. As shown in
As shown in
The plurality of first bearings 18 are disposed inside the expander casing inlet-side portion 42. As shown in
One first bearing 18a supports the first rotation shaft 34a at the vapor inlet 45a side so that the expander rotor 32a is rotatable, and the first bearing 18b supports the first rotation shaft 34b at the vapor inlet 45a side so that the expander rotor 32b is rotatable. Each of the first bearings 18a and 18b is a ball bearing. As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The communication passage 58 is located above the lowermost portions 18c and 18e of the first bearings 18a and 18b. Specifically, one end of the communication passage 58 is connected to the first bearing chamber 46a at a position above the lower end of the ball 18d of the lowermost portion 18c of the first bearing 18a, and the other end of the communication passage 58 is connected to the first bearing chamber 46b at a position above the lower end of the ball 18f of the lowermost portion 18e of the first bearing 18b. Further, the lower end of the communication passage 58 is located below the lowermost portions 52c and 52d of the first shaft seals 52a and 52b, that is, the lowermost portions of the first shaft sealing chambers 47a and 47b.
In this embodiment, a part of the working medium and the lubricant in the mixed fluid introduced from the vapor inlet 45a (see
Since the end 56a of the passage 56 is connected to the first bearing chamber 46a at a position above the lowermost portion 18c of the first bearing 18a, the lubricant remains in the lowermost portion 18c of the first bearing 18a even when the lubricant flows from the first bearing chamber 46a to the intermediate portion 51a of the expansion chamber 51 through the passage 56. Specifically, the lower end of the ball 18d located at the lowermost portion 18c of the first bearing 18a is continuously immersed into the lubricant. Further, since the communication passage 58 causing the pair of first bearing chambers 46a and 46b to communicate with each other is located above the lowermost portions 18c and 18e of the first bearings 18a and 18b, the lubricant remains in the lowermost portion 18e of the first bearing 18b even when the lubricant flows from the first bearing chamber 46b into one first bearing chamber 46a through the communication passage 58. Specifically, the lower end of the ball 18f located at the lowermost portion 18e of the first bearing 18b is continuously immersed in the lubricant. With the above-described configuration, the oil shortage of the first bearings 18a and 18b may be prevented during the activation of the power generation apparatus 2, and hence the damage and the degradation in durability of the first bearings 18a and 18b may be suppressed.
Further, in this embodiment, since the lubricant having been used to lubricate the first bearings 18a and 18b is discharged from the first bearing chambers 46a and 46b into the intermediate portion 51a of the expansion chamber 51 of which the pressure is lower than those of the first bearing chambers 46a and 46b due to the pressure difference, there is no need to provide an oil reservoir for accumulating the lubricant inside the casing 12 and a pump for discharging the lubricant. For this reason, the configuration of the power generation apparatus 2 may be simplified and the manufacturing cost thereof may be reduced.
Further, in this embodiment, since the lower end 56b of the end 56a of the passage 56 connected to the first bearing chamber 46a is located below the lowermost portion 52c of the first shaft seal 52a, it is possible to prevent the lubricant from being accumulated to a position equal to or higher than the lowermost portion 52c of the first shaft seal 52a even when the lubricant is accumulated in the first bearing chamber 46a. Further, since the lower end of the end of the communication passage 58 connected to the first bearing chamber 46b is located below the lowermost portion 52d of the first shaft seal 52b, it is possible to prevent the lubricant from being accumulated to a position equal to or higher than the lowermost portion 52d of the first shaft seal 52b even when the lubricant is accumulated in the first bearing chamber 46b. For this reason, it is possible to suppress the loss of the power caused by the agitation of the lubricant during the rotation of the expander rotors 32a and 32b with an excessive increase in the amount of the lubricant accumulated in the first bearing chambers 46a and 46b.
Further, in this embodiment, since the low-pressure portion connected to the passage 56 is the intermediate portion 51a of the expansion chamber 51, the lubricant having been used to lubricate the first bearings 18a and 18b may be returned to the intermediate portion 51a of the expansion chamber 51 through the passage 56. Accordingly, the lubricant that is returned to the intermediate portion 51a may be used to lubricate the expander rotors 32a and 32b.
Furthermore, it should be understood that the embodiment disclosed herein is merely an example in every respect. The scope of the present invention is expressed by not the embodiment but claims, and includes the meaning equivalent to claims and all modifications within the scope.
For example, as in the first modified example shown in
Further, as in the second modified example shown in
Further, as in a third modified example shown in
The present invention may be applied to not only the expander with two rotors but also the expander with a single rotor. For example, the present invention may be also applied to a scroll expander or a turbo expander.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2013-115036 | May 2013 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3178104 | Williams et al. | Apr 1965 | A |
4311021 | Leo | Jan 1982 | A |
4758136 | Pamlin | Jul 1988 | A |
4781553 | Nomura | Nov 1988 | A |
6612820 | Staat et al. | Sep 2003 | B1 |
20070175212 | Uno et al. | Aug 2007 | A1 |
20120237382 | Yoshimura | Sep 2012 | A1 |
20130052072 | Smith et al. | Feb 2013 | A1 |
20140159369 | Tsuboi | Jun 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
201420941 | Mar 2010 | CN |
103867233 | Jun 2014 | CN |
2477777 | Aug 2011 | GB |
62-502279 | Sep 1987 | JP |
4684882 | May 2011 | JP |
2013-83169 | May 2013 | JP |
2013083169 | May 2013 | JP |
WO 0042322 | Jul 2000 | WO |
WO 2006131759 | Dec 2006 | WO |
WO 2006131759 | Dec 2006 | WO |
WO 2008121070 | Oct 2008 | WO |
Entry |
---|
JP 2013-083169, Machine Translation, Translated on Jul. 21, 2017. |
Extended European Search Report dated Jun. 11, 2014, in Patent Application No. 14161916.3. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20140356208 A1 | Dec 2014 | US |