The present invention relates to Shell and Tube Flooded Evaporators for refrigeration applications.
Shell and tube flooded evaporator is an integral part of a refrigeration system. In a typical refrigeration system there is an evaporator that cools the process fluid at the expense of boiling the refrigerant that is at a lower saturation temperature and pressure, a compressor that compresses the boiled off refrigerant to an elevated pressure and temperature, a condenser that condenses the high pressure refrigerant to liquid phase at the expense of heating the cooling medium, and an expansion device that drops down the pressure of the condensed refrigerant back to the low side which then enters the evaporator to repeat the above cycle again. This cycle is called the reverse Rankine cycle.
Enhanced surface tubes such as shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,521,708, 3,696,861, 3,821,018, 4,018,264, 4,060,125, 4,179,911, 4,182,412, 4,216,826, 5,697,430, 5,933,953 and 6,457,516 are being used on a regular basis in flooded refrigerant evaporators to reduce the overall size and/or refrigerant charge. In a large capacity unit these high efficiency tubes could create so much vapor that sometimes it may cause negative effects in the upper sections of the evaporator tube bundle. Hence, resulting in no benefit at a higher cost. Therefore, it is desirable to design and fabricate a tube bundle with various kinds of tubes along the height of the bundle that would result in a most optimized and economical evaporator.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a tube bundle configuration that would utilize various kinds of tubes. These tubes are selected on its individual merits within different sections of the tube bundle of an evaporator.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a bundle layout for a flooded shell and tube evaporator that would result in an economical and optimized unit.
A flooded evaporator consists of a shell, tube sheets, baffles or tube supports, tie-rods and tubes. The tubes are in a horizontal position and held together at certain distance to each other by the baffles or tube supports, tie-rods and the tube sheets at each end. This section of the evaporator is also called a tube bundle. The tube bundle is enclosed within a shell by weldment at the location where the shell meets the tube sheets. To create an optimized and economical bundle various kinds of tubes are used in different sections of the bundle. Tubes with high nucleate boiling characteristics are used in the lower section with progressively different types of tubes along the height of the bundle according to the upward moving two phase flow of the refrigerant on the shell side. The top section where the vapor concentration is the highest can utilize prime (plain) surface tubes.
In
The process fluid such as water or brine or any other fluid to be cooled enters the tube side 17 at the front head 1 (attached to the tubesheets 3 through bolting 5 or welding) via inlet port 10. Depending upon the nature of application, the heads 1 and 2 could be arranged for multiple pass or single pass configuration. In the case of multiple pass the front head 1 and the rear head 2 carry pass partition plates 14 at the corresponding lane 21 on the tube sheets 3 that directs the process fluid in the tubes 6 back and front through respective quantity of tubes in each pass until the fluid exits at head 1 via port 11 for even-pass configuration as shown in
Low temperature and low pressure liquid or liquid-gas mixture of refrigerant enters the shell side 16 via port 12. As the refrigerant travels upwards it extracts heat from the hot fluid in the tubes 6 and progressively evaporates. The vapor/liquid ratio increases along the height of the tube bundle. The wet vapor exits the shell side 16 via risers 15 and enters the separator 8 and leaves the separator 8 as liquid-free vapor via port 13.
Recently the use of high efficiency tubes in flooded evaporators has become a common feature in many commercial and industrial refrigeration applications. These tubes have the quality to boil off refrigerant at lower temperature differentials and also develop high-density bubble sites per unit tube length. This results in higher cooling capacity compared to conventional prime (plain) surface tubes. Because of this feature the vapor generation becomes so intense that it causes high vapor-rich zone 18 in the upper section of a tube bundle as shown in
In view of this behavior this invention proposes utilization of various kinds of tubes appropriately selected along the height of the tube bundle, with high efficiency tubes having strong nucleate boiling characteristics in the lower section, say, Section I as shown in
The tube distribution along the height of the bundle is dictated by the bundle depth, temperature differential between inlet port 10 and outlet port 11, the temperature difference between the tube side 17 and the shell side 16, the type of pass arrangement on the tube side 17 and the transport properties of the process fluid being cooled. One arrangement could be to match the number of tube kinds with the number of passes on the tube side 17, e.g., for two pass arrangement two different kinds of tubes could be used. If the bundle height is large and has two or less passes on the tube side 17, it can have more than two kinds of tubes depending upon the design parameters, e.g., in
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2065708 | Keirle | Dec 1936 | A |
2147788 | Gay | Feb 1939 | A |
2312312 | Beline | Mar 1943 | A |
2535996 | Worn et al. | Dec 1950 | A |
3267693 | Richardson et al. | Aug 1966 | A |
3345829 | Hall | Oct 1967 | A |
3521708 | Webb | Jul 1970 | A |
3696861 | Webb | Oct 1972 | A |
3789617 | Rannow | Feb 1974 | A |
3821018 | Grant | Jun 1974 | A |
4016835 | Yarden et al. | Apr 1977 | A |
4018264 | Albertson | Apr 1977 | A |
4060125 | Fujie et al. | Nov 1977 | A |
4179911 | Saier et al. | Dec 1979 | A |
4182412 | Shum | Jan 1980 | A |
4216826 | Fujikake | Aug 1980 | A |
4671082 | Maeda et al. | Jun 1987 | A |
5561987 | Hartfield et al. | Oct 1996 | A |
5697430 | Thors et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5839294 | Chiang et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
5915468 | Inoue et al. | Jun 1999 | A |
5933953 | Spencer et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
6161613 | Huenniger | Dec 2000 | A |
6189491 | Wittchow et al. | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6293112 | Moeykens et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6302194 | Kastner et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6457516 | Brand et al. | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6516627 | Ring et al. | Feb 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
3121346 | Dec 1982 | DE |
58052981 | Mar 1983 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040256088 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |