1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to a shell-and-tube evaporator of a refrigerant system. More particularly, the present invention relates to a distributor that directs the flow of a two-phase refrigerant mixture entering the evaporator.
2. Description of Related Art
The primary components of a refrigeration chiller include a compressor, a condenser, an expansion device and an evaporator. Higher pressure refrigerant gas is delivered from the compressor to the condenser where the refrigerant gas is cooled and condensed to the liquid state. The condensed refrigerant passes from the condenser to and through the expansion device. Passage of the refrigerant through the expansion device causes a pressure drop therein and the further cooling thereof. As a result, the refrigerant delivered from the expansion device to the evaporator is a relatively cool, saturated two-phase mixture.
The two-phase refrigerant mixture delivered to the evaporator is brought into contact with a tube bundle disposed therein and through which a relatively warmer heat transfer medium, such as water, flows. That medium will have been warmed by heat exchange contact with the heat load which it is the purpose of the refrigeration chiller to cool. Heat exchange contact between the relatively cool refrigerant and the relatively warm heat transfer medium flowing through the tube bundle causes the refrigerant to vaporize and the heat transfer medium to be cooled. The now cooled medium is returned to the heat load to further cool the load while the heated and now vaporized refrigerant is directed out of the evaporator and is drawn into the compressor for recompression and delivery to the condenser in a continuous process.
The rate of heat transfer from the refrigerant to the chilled fluid can be maximized by wetting the evaporator's entire tube bundle with liquid refrigerant. Consequently, various evaporators and distributors have been designed for this purpose. Examples of such systems are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,012,183; 2,314,402; 3,240,265; 3,789,617; 5,836,382 and 6,655,173.
The '183 patent shows a pan for collecting liquid refrigerant draining from a tube bundle of a cylindrical shell evaporator. A pump draws the liquid refrigerant from the pan and sprays it back over the top of the tube bundle. The pan is said to minimize the amount of unused refrigerant that would otherwise be found below the tube bundle. The pump and overhead sprayer, however, add cost and complexity to the overall system.
The '402 patent illustrates what appears to be some sort of liquid refrigerant distributor underneath the evaporator's tube bundle. Since the distributor is fed by refrigerant “in liquid form,” as stated in the patent, it appears that such a distributor could contain a significant amount of liquid refrigerant that would be sheltered in a relatively ineffective heat transfer area below the tube bundle.
The '265 patent discloses an evaporator with a horizontal plate that helps create a vaporous refrigerant chamber underneath a partially submerged tube bundle. The plate and chamber, however, apparently are not used as a distributor of liquid refrigerant because a vertical pipe equalizes the pressure above and below the plate. Thus, there is generally little or no flow through the hole in the plate. Instead, the chamber is simply used for insulating the liquid refrigerant from the surrounding ambient air.
The '617 and '173 patents each disclose what appears to be a perforated horizontal plate that might serve as a liquid refrigerant distributor for an overhead tube bundle. Due to the orientation of the plates and their holes, it looks like the area underneath the plates can fill with liquid refrigerant, thus it appears that neither plate provides any significant reduction in liquid refrigerant.
The '382 patent shows a distributor disposed beneath the tube bundle of an evaporator. The distributor, however, displaces an inconsequential amount of liquid refrigerant, as the distributor is above the floor of the evaporator shell, so liquid refrigerant can collect in that area. Moreover, liquid refrigerant can also collect in areas along side the distributor as well as above and inside the distributor.
Consequently, a need exists for a refrigerant distributor that minimizes the amount of liquid refrigerant in an evaporator shell while evenly wetting the evaporator's entire tube bundle along the full length of the shell.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an evaporator with a distributor that minimizes the amount of liquid refrigerant necessary to completely wet a tube bundle within the evaporator.
It is also an object of the present invention to reduce the refrigerant charge in an evaporator by using the gaseous refrigerant of a two-phase refrigerant to displace the liquid portion, which would otherwise collect below the tube bundle.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an evaporator with a distributor that not only evenly distributes liquid refrigerant across a tube bundle but also displaces a significant amount of liquid refrigerant below the tube bundle, thereby minimizing the total amount of liquid refrigerant needed in the evaporator.
It is also an object of some embodiments to apportion a source of liquid refrigerant among four sections of a distributor, wherein the four sections are axially distributed along the length of the evaporator. This allows the evaporator's tube bundle to receive an even distribution of refrigerant even if the evaporator is divided along its length by axially distributed baffles or tube supports.
It is also an object of the present invention to trap a pocket of gaseous refrigerant within a distributor, thereby displacing liquid refrigerant that would otherwise fill that space.
It is a further object of the present invention to trap a pocket of gaseous refrigerant at an elevation that at times can be between upper and lower liquid/vapor refrigerant levels within an evaporator.
It is a still further object of the present invention to trap a pocket of gaseous refrigerant at a pressure that is higher than the refrigerant surrounding a tube bundle within the evaporator.
It is an additional object of some embodiments to provide a distributor with a gas trap chamber that leaks at a volume flow rate that is less than the volume flow rate of gaseous refrigerant flowing into the distributor.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a distributor with a sidewall and a ceiling that create a gas trap chamber inside the distributor, wherein the sidewall defines one or more outlets for releasing liquid refrigerant near the bottom the distributor.
It is yet another object of some embodiments to provide an evaporator with two distributors that define a refrigerant passageway therebetween.
One or more of these and/or other objects of the invention are provided by a distributor that reduces the refrigerant charge in an evaporator by using the gaseous portion of a two-phase refrigerant mixture to displace some the liquid portion of the mixture.
Referring to
Compressor 12 can be any type of compressor including, but not limited to, a centrifugal, screw, scroll or reciprocating compressor. Expansion device 16 is any suitable flow restriction such as an orifice, an orifice plate (i.e., plate with a plurality of flow restricting orifices), capillary tube, reduced diameter pipe, valve, etc. Evaporator 18 is preferably a shell-and-tube heat exchanger comprising a plurality of heat exchanger tubes 20 disposed within an evaporator shell 22. Although R123 is the currently preferred refrigerant, system 10 could conceivably handle a wide variety of other refrigerants as well.
As a two-phase refrigerant 24 (mixture of liquid refrigerant 24a and gaseous/vaporous refrigerant 24b) enters an inlet 26 of evaporator 18, a novel distributor system 28 evenly distributes the liquid portion 24a of the refrigerant across the plurality of tubes 20. To reduce the total amount of refrigerant charge within evaporator 18, distributor 28 uses the gaseous portion 24b of refrigerant 24 to displace some of the liquid portion 24a that would otherwise collect in a relatively ineffective area underneath the plurality of heat exchanger tubes 20.
The main components of chiller system 10 are connected in series-flow relationship to create a conventional closed-loop refrigerant circuit for providing chilled water. In basic operation, compressor 12 discharges compressed gaseous refrigerant 24c through a discharge line 30 that leads to condenser 14. A cooling fluid passing through a tube bundle 32 in condenser 14 cools and condenses the refrigerant.
A line 34 conveys condensed refrigerant 24d from condenser 14 through expansion device 16. Upon passing through expansion device 16, the refrigerant cools by expansion before entering inlet 26 and distributor 28 as the two-phase mixture 24 of liquid and gaseous refrigerant. If the refrigerant is R123, the refrigerant mixture 24 flowing from expansion device 16 to distributor 28 can be comprised of over 90% gaseous refrigerant 24b by volume and over 90% liquid refrigerant 24a by weight.
Distributor 28 directs the mixture of liquid refrigerant 24a and gaseous refrigerant 24b upward past heat exchanger tubes 20. The refrigerant mixture flowing upward through evaporator 18 is generally a vaporous mist of gaseous refrigerant with entrained liquid refrigerant droplets. The liquid refrigerant droplets wet the exterior surface of tubes 20 and vaporize upon cooling a heat absorbing fluid flowing therein. The heat absorbing fluid, which can be water or some other fluid, can be pumped to remote locations for various cooling purposes. Meanwhile, the vaporized refrigerant 24b in evaporator 18 returns to a suction line 36 of compressor 12 to repeat the refrigerant cycle.
To minimize the refrigerant charge in evaporator 18, system 10 includes at least one distributor 40 that creates at least one gas trap chamber 42a, as shown in
From chamber 42a, the liquid refrigerant 24a flows out through at least one outlet 48 near the bottom of distributor 28 and then flows upward through a refrigerant passageway 50 to enter an evaporating chamber 52 containing tubes 20. Depending on the cooling load or other operating conditions, liquid refrigerant 24a may or may not create a pool 38 of liquid refrigerant in evaporating chamber 52. If a pool 38 is created, it may have an upper liquid/vapor refrigerant level 54 that is sufficient to partially or completely submerge one or more rows of heat exchanger tubes 20.
Regardless of whether pool 38 exists, a mist of refrigerant rises through evaporating chamber 52 to wet the exterior surface of tubes 20. To inhibit the liquid droplets of the refrigerant mist from being drawn into suction line 36 of compressor 12, evaporator 18 preferably includes some type of demister 58 or conventional liquid/vapor separator.
Referring further to
A conduit 72, such as an inverted channel, can be used to place the four sections of the two distributors 40 and 60 in fluid communication with each other. It should be noted, however, that many other types of conduits or manifolds, such as pipe or tubing installed on the interior or exterior of evaporator shell 22 are also well within the scope of the invention. Conduit 72 is intentionally not shown in
Each distributor section 64, 66, 68 and 70 can be formed of sheet metal with an endplate 74 welded at one end. The distributor sections may be of different lengths, or they can all be the same. The distributor sections may have a lower flange 76 that helps align section 64 to section 68 and align section 66 to section 70. Notches 78 in flanges 76 provide convenient spots for welding flange 76 to a lower surface 80 of shell 22. An outer edge 82 of the distributor sections can be welded to shell 22 via intermittent weld beads 84. The space between weld beads 84 may create a leak path 86 for gaseous refrigerant 88 to escape gas trap chamber 42; however, this does not create a problem as long the volume flow rate of the leak is less than the volume flow rate of the gaseous refrigerant 24b entering chamber 42 from inlet 26.
To evenly distribute liquid refrigerant 24a along the full length of the heat exchanger tubes 20, each distributor section 64, 66, 68 and 70 can be provided with a series of outlets 48, wherein each series can be at a different position along the length of shell 22, as shown in
To convey liquid and gaseous refrigerant to the various distributor sections, conduit 72 can be formed or fabricated as shown in
To apportion the refrigerant flow to chambers 42a and 42b, an upstream end 94 of conduit 72 lies across inlet 26, as shown in
In an alternate embodiment, shown in
To displace liquid refrigerant 24a with trapped gaseous refrigerant 24b, sections 112a, 112b, 120a and 120b each include a gas trap chamber 126, 128, 130 and 132, respectively. Beneath the gas trap chambers, liquid refrigerant 24a collects immediately upstream of a plurality of outlets 134a, 134b, 134c and 134d. Each set of outlets 134a, 134b, 134c and 134d delivers the collected refrigerant to different areas of the tube bundle. By apportioning the refrigerant among the four axially displaced sections 112a, 112b, 120a and 120b, distributor 106 can interject the refrigerant between tube supports and evenly distribute the refrigerant along the entire length of the evaporator's tube bundle.
Although the invention is described with reference to a preferred embodiment, it should be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that other variations are well within the scope of the invention. Evaporator 18, for instance, is shown as a shell-and-tube heat exchanger with two waterboxes 102; however, other types of heat exchangers with single or multiple passes are certainly possible. The scope of the invention, therefore, is to be determined by reference to the following claims: