This application claims the benefit of and priority to Brazil Patent Application No. 102022005074-0, filed Mar. 18, 2022, and Brazil Patent Application No. 132022007149-6, filed Apr. 13, 2022, the contents of both of which being incorporated by reference in their entireties herein.
The present application refers to a device for electric generator units, in which, in particular, such device is supplied in the form of a container or canopy. The device makes use of a vehicular engine in which, under the canopy of a modular structure, a dry cooler heat exchanger is accommodated, and not an engine radiator, with a different arrangement from the other existing units. In a possible embodiment, the dry cooler heat exchanger is not accommodated under the canopy, but is detached from the modular structure.
Modular generator units allow the supply of electricity in standby mode, prime power, or continuous use, mainly in industrial, commercial buildings, remote areas, such as isolated rural communities, mining fields, oil platforms, areas recently affected by storms, areas affected by earthquakes, offshore platforms, etc., or areas in conflict or where other demanding circumstances are present.
In general, generator units are made up of containers, canopies, or similar structures in which generator units are installed with cooling provided by propellers coupled directly to the engine. However, although conventional generator units provide electrical energy, they can be designed more efficiently in such a way they consume less fuel in the generation of each kilowatt-hour.
Thus, with the aim of providing improvements to the consumer market, an autonomous system is described, supplied in the form of a container, that makes use of a vehicle engine, powered by natural gas, biogas, diesel oil, biodiesel, or hydrogen. A canopy or container of the modular structure supports a heat exchanger as a drycooler not mechanically coupled to the engine, in which the autonomous generator unit, with the use of a vehicular engine, allows a compact unit, easy to transport, and which allows gain in efficiency and mitigated mechanical loss through the use of small high-efficiency electric fans that blow the drycooler, effecting the heat exchange between the circulating water in the drycooler and the air that is forced through its coils.
In some aspects, the drycooler heat exchanger is not accommodated under the canopy, but is detached from the modular structure. This solution is especially adapted to places where there is no physical space for the model including the heat exchanger under the canopy, forcing the installation on the ceiling of the generator unit, or for installations in buildings wherein the drycooler needs to be installed outside the building, or installation in powerhouses with multiple open generator units installed. In one embodiment, the drycooler heat exchanger is positioned next to said modular structure. In another embodiment, the drycooler heat exchanger is positioned above said modular structure.
As a complement to the present description, and in order to allow a better understanding of the characteristics of the generator unit according to a preferred embodiment thereof, the present description is accompanied by a set of drawings that include, for illustrative purposes and non-limiting, the following:
With reference to the aforementioned drawings, this application refers to a generator unit comprising a vehicle engine, powered by natural gas, biogas, diesel oil, or biodiesel, and a drycooler heat exchanger. More specifically, an autonomous system is described, of the type supplied in the form of a container, that makes use of a vehicular engine in which a canopy or container, of the modular structure supports a drycooler heat exchanger not mechanically coupled to the engine unit, in which the autonomous generator unit with the use of an engine vehicular provides a compact unit that is easy to transport, and that allows gain in efficiency and mitigated mechanical loss.
Generally, the use of a propeller coupled to the engine causes efficiency losses that can be improved with the use of air/water heat exchangers called industrial drycoolers, typically used in large-scale air conditioning systems and industrial heat removal processes, among others. Alternative includes systems that use the propeller and the radiator of a vehicle engine, mechanically decoupled from the engine, with the propeller driven by a common electric motor. However, this alternative was not efficient in terms of use. Therefore, a solution involving a vehicle engine in this type of modular configuration of generator units remains in the state of the art.
Thus, it is desirable to continue to maintain an optimal temperature exchange of the generator unit powered by the vehicular combustion engine in the inside the container or canopy by means of a drycooler heat exchanger, thus solving some of the current problems. The present disclosure stands out for the fact that are used herein drycoolers which are specifically developed for vehicular engines that have been readjusted.
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A drycooler-type heat exchanger (15), with drycooler output baffles (16), in which the drycooler heat exchanger is used, adapted, or configured to cool the vehicle engine (17), coupled to a main alternator (18), starter batteries (19), and a control panel (20). The assembly supported by the base further comprises fans for air intake in the engine compartment (21).
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In summary, this application discloses a generator unit configuration and an autonomous system, in which a vehicle engine is cooled through a drycooler heat exchanger not coupled to the engine, aiming at an alternative to the common way, which consists of a propeller coupled to and moved by an engine or engine itself and a common radiator used in vehicles, which is normally supplied by the engine manufacturer as an integral part of the assembly, and which consumes much more fuel in terms of kilowatt hours of consumption of fuel. This set, developed for this specific engine configuration, provides maximum mechanical power with lower engine consumption, operating in the absence of propellers, alternator, and battery alternator.
The compact configuration allows easy unit transport, with the generator unit and drycooler comprised in a single module, under the same canopy, fairing or container.
Other embodiments of this compact configuration also allow easy transport, with the generator unit and drycooler are provided in a detached/separate way, and not under the same canopy, fairing or container. This solution is especially adapted to places where there is no physical space for the model including the heat exchanger under the canopy, forcing the installation on the ceiling of the installation, or for installations in buildings wherein the drycooler needs to be installed outside the building, or installation in powerhouses with multiple open generator sets installed. The module offers significant advantages compared to the documents of the state of the art, perfectly fitting the patentability criteria insofar as it implements a tailor-made combination and development for the use of vehicular engines in generator sets, resulting in an improvement with new use of this type of engine, by means of a drycooler heat exchanger not mechanically coupled to the engine.
Preferred embodiments of this application have been described, with the proviso that any changes and/or alterations are to be understood as being within the scope of this application as presented.
The features, structures, or characteristics described above may be combined in one or more embodiments in any suitable manner, and the features discussed in the various embodiments may be interchangeable, if possible. In the following description, numerous specific details are provided in order to fully understand the embodiments of the present disclosure. However, a person skilled in the art will appreciate that the technical solution of the present disclosure may be practiced without one or more of the specific details, or other methods, components, materials, and the like may be employed. In other instances, well-known structures, materials, or operations are not shown or described in detail to avoid obscuring aspects of the present disclosure.
Although the relative terms such as “on,” “below,” “upper,” and “lower” are used in the specification to describe the relative relationship of one component to another component, these terms are used in this specification for convenience only, for example, as a direction in an example shown in the drawings. It should be understood that if the device is turned upside down, the “upper” component described above will become a “lower” component. When a structure is “on” another structure, it is possible that the structure is integrally formed on another structure, or that the structure is “directly” disposed on another structure, or that the structure is “indirectly” disposed on the other structure through other structures.
In this specification, the terms such as “a,” “an,” “the,” and “said” are used to indicate the presence of one or more elements and components. The terms “comprise,” “include,” “have,” “contain,” and their variants are used to be open ended, and are meant to include additional elements, components, etc., in addition to the listed elements, components, etc. unless otherwise specified in the appended claims.
The terms “first,” “second,” etc. are used only as labels, rather than a limitation for a number of the objects. It is understood that if multiple components are shown, the components may be referred to as a “first” component, a “second” component, and so forth, to the extent applicable.
The above-described embodiments of the present disclosure are merely possible examples of implementations set forth for a clear understanding of the principles of the disclosure. Many variations and modifications may be made to the above-described embodiment(s) without departing substantially from the spirit and principles of the disclosure. All such modifications and variations are intended to be included herein within the scope of this disclosure and protected by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102022005074-0 | Mar 2022 | BR | national |
132022007149-6 | Apr 2022 | BR | national |