This disclosure relates generally to heat exchangers with features directed to various innovations including ones relating to the gas turbine recuperators.
The recuperation of the gas turbine engine has been proven to increase thermal efficiency. However, the technical challenges associated with surviving the severe environment of a gas turbine exhaust while meeting the equally severe cost challenges has limited the number of viable products. A gas turbine recuperator is typically exposed to a thermal gradient of up to 600 degrees C., pressures of 3 to 16 bar, and may operate at a gas temperature of over 700 degrees C. Moreover, developers of advanced recuperated Brayton (gas turbine) systems are considering applications with pressures of up to 80 bar and temperatures ranging to 1000 degrees C.
The successful design must tolerate severe thermal gradients, and repeated thermal cycling, by allowing unrestricted thermal strain. The structural requirements to manage very high pressures tend to work against the normal design preferences for structural flexibility, which is important to tolerating large and rapid thermal transients.
Child, Kesseli, and Nash (U.S. Pat. No. 5,983,992) describe a flexible heat exchanger design as shown in
As exemplified by U.S. Pat. No. 4,073,340 to Garrett, other traditional manufacturers have produced heat exchangers formed of individual cells, brazed together employing stamped edge conditions and integral cut-out manifolds cut-out from the parting plate, principally similar to Child et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,983,992).
British Patent No. 1,197,449 to Chausson shows a formed header like Child et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,983,992) and Garrett (U.S. Pat. No. 4,073,340) and the raised sheet metal manifold integral with the parting plates. Referring to
Lowery (British Patent No. 1,304,692) discloses a cellular heat exchanger concept as shown in
U.S. Pat. No. 3,460,611 to Folsom et al. describes a plate-fin heat exchanger incorporating formed parting plates and strip fin. Quoting from this specification, “These parts are bonded or soldered together to make an integral unit or module and before that unit is incorporated in a stack or modules it conveniently may be tested and proven without leaks or cause to attain that condition.” See Folsom et al. at column 2, lines 51-55. See also claims 1 through 6 of U.S. Pat. No. 6,305,079 to Child et al. The heat exchange cell of Folsom et al., like that of Child et al, has formed lands around the perimeter. The apparatuses of Folsom et al. and Child et al. both incorporate formed lands around the header, thereby creating a cell not suitable for high internal pressure. Also, Folsom's formed semi-circular manifold requires an additional welding operation to attach the cell to a pipe or collector.
Based upon the foregoing limitations known to exist in plate-fin heat exchangers, it would be beneficial to provide a heat exchanger having a rigid manifold section capable of operation at elevated pressure, connecting to a light gauge, flexible sheet metal structure imposing limited mechanical constraints on and between neighboring cells.
In one aspect, the present disclosure relates to a heat exchange device for transferring heat between a first fluid and a second fluid and comprising a plurality of heat exchange cells in a stacked arrangement and defining an inlet manifold and an outlet manifold. Each of the heat exchange cells comprises an upper cell plate having an exterior facing surface and an interior facing surface opposite the exterior facing surface. The upper cell plate has an inlet aperture, an outlet aperture, a central upper cell plate portion extending between the inlet aperture and the outlet aperture, and an upper peripheral edge bounding the inlet aperture, outlet aperture, and the central upper cell plate portion. A lower cell plate has an exterior facing surface and an interior facing surface opposite the exterior facing surface. The lower cell plate has an inlet aperture, an outlet aperture, a central lower cell plate portion, and a lower peripheral edge bounding the inlet aperture, outlet aperture, and the central lower cell plate portion. The lower cell plate is juxtaposed with the upper cell plate so that the inlet aperture of the lower cell plate is aligned with the inlet aperture of the upper cell plate, the outlet aperture of the lower cell plate is aligned with the outlet aperture of the upper cell plate, and the central lower cell plate portion is aligned with the central upper cell plate portion. The upper peripheral edge is joined to the lower peripheral edge to define a cell peripheral edge. The interior facing surface of the upper cell plate faces and is spaced apart from the interior facing surface of the lower cell plate to define an interior volume therebetween. The interior volume has a cell inlet and a cell outlet and defining a fluid passageway for the second fluid between the cell inlet and the cell outlet, wherein the cell inlet is adjacent the inlet aperture of the upper cell plate and the inlet aperture of the lower cell plate, and the cell outlet is adjacent the outlet aperture of the upper cell plate and the outlet aperture of the lower cell plate. A first heat transfer matrix is positioned within the interior volume, a second heat transfer matrix is attached to the exterior surface of the upper cell plate, and a third heat transfer matrix is attached to the exterior surface of the lower cell plate. An upper inlet manifold ring is attached to the exterior surface of the upper plate and circumscribes the inlet aperture of the upper cell plate. An upper outlet manifold ring is attached to the exterior surface of the upper plate and circumscribes the outlet aperture of the upper cell plate. A lower inlet manifold ring is attached to the exterior surface of the lower plate and circumscribes the inlet aperture of the lower cell plate. A lower outlet manifold ring is attached to the exterior surface of the lower plate and circumscribes the outlet aperture of the lower cell plate.
In a second aspect, the present disclosure relates to a method of manufacturing a heat exchange device of a type for transferring heat between a first fluid and a second fluid, the method including assembling a plurality of heat exchange cells. Each heat exchange cell comprises an upper cell plate having an exterior facing surface and an interior facing surface opposite the exterior facing surface. The upper cell plate has an inlet aperture, an outlet aperture, a central upper cell plate portion extending between the inlet aperture and the outlet aperture, and an upper peripheral edge bounding the inlet aperture, outlet aperture, and the central upper cell plate portion. A lower cell plate has an exterior facing surface and an interior facing surface opposite the exterior facing surface. The lower cell plate has an inlet aperture, an outlet aperture, a central lower cell plate portion, and a lower peripheral edge bounding the inlet aperture, outlet aperture, and the central lower cell plate portion. The lower cell plate is juxtaposed with the upper cell plate so that the inlet aperture of the lower cell plate is aligned with the inlet aperture of the upper cell plate, the outlet aperture of the lower cell plate is aligned with the outlet aperture of the upper cell plate, and the central lower cell plate portion is aligned with the central upper cell plate portion. The upper peripheral edge is joined to the lower peripheral edge to define a cell peripheral edge. The interior facing surface of the upper cell plate faces and is spaced apart from the interior facing surface of the lower cell plate to define an interior volume therebetween. The interior volume has a cell inlet and a cell outlet and defining a fluid passageway for the second fluid between the cell inlet and the cell outlet, wherein the cell inlet is adjacent the inlet aperture of the upper cell plate and the inlet aperture of the lower cell plate, and the cell outlet is adjacent the outlet aperture of the upper cell plate and the outlet aperture of the lower cell plate. A first heat transfer matrix is positioned within the interior volume, a second heat transfer matrix is attached to the exterior surface of the upper cell plate, and a third heat transfer matrix is attached to the exterior surface of the lower cell plate. An upper inlet manifold ring is attached to the exterior surface of the upper plate and circumscribes the inlet aperture of the upper cell plate. An upper outlet manifold ring is attached to the exterior surface of the upper plate and circumscribes the outlet aperture of the upper cell plate. A lower inlet manifold ring is attached to the exterior surface of the lower plate and circumscribes the inlet aperture of the lower cell plate. A lower outlet manifold ring is attached to the exterior surface of the lower plate and circumscribes the outlet aperture of the lower cell plate. The plurality of heat exchange cells are stacked such that a contacting surface of the lower inlet manifold ring of one of the plurality of the heat exchange cells contacts a contacting surface of the upper inlet manifold ring of an adjacent one of the plurality of heat exchange cells and a contacting surface of the lower outlet manifold ring of the one of the plurality of the heat exchange cells contacts a contacting surface of the upper outlet manifold ring of the adjacent one of the plurality of heat exchange cells. The plurality of heat exchange cells are metallurgically joined at the contacting surfaces of the upper and lower inlet manifold rings and the contacting surfaces of the upper and lower outlet manifold rings.
The invention may take form in various components and arrangements of components, and in various steps and arrangements of steps. The drawings are only for purposes of illustrating preferred embodiments and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.
The parting plates 1 and 2 may be cut from sheet stock with a profile similar to that shown in
Manifolds serve as a means for collecting the fluid flow from the headers. The manifolds for each cross-flow header are formed by cutting holes 15 and 97 in each parting plate 1 and cutout apertures 25 and 27 in each plate 2 intersecting the area occupied header matrix elements 6 and 7. A circular manifold ring 10 is affixed on the exterior facing surface of the flat sheet 1, in substantial alignment and circumscribing the diameter of cutout 15. Similarly, a manifold ring 11 is affixed to the exterior surface of the flat sheet 1 surrounding the cutout 97. Although the manifold rings and the corresponding cutout portions in the upper and lower cell plates are shown herein as being generally circular in cross-sectional shape, other manifold shapes are contemplates, such as inlet and outlet manifolds having a generally D-shaped cross section (see, e.g.,
As plate 2 is a mirror image of plate 1, manifold rings 12 and 13 are affixed to the exterior facing surface of the flat plate 2, surrounding manifold cutouts 25 and 27, respectively. The manifold rings 10, 11, 12, 13 provide structural reinforcement of the manifold defined thereby and serve as a weldable flange when joining the elemental heat exchanger cell to like cells or termination flanges, e.g., when forming an assembled heat exchange unit comprising a stacked plurality of heat exchange cells 20. The thickness of the manifold rings is substantially equal to that or the counter-flow matrix element 4 or 5, also affixed to the exterior surface of the envelope formed by the respective parting plates 1 and 2.
The perimeter of the parting plates 1 and 2 may be formed, for example, by either option illustrated in
An alternative perimeter configuration is shown in
In alternative embodiments, the heat exchanger embodiments herein may be constructed from materials other than metals or metallic alloys. Such alternative materials include, for example, ceramic materials and high-temperature polymers. In these cases, the cell elements may be joined by sintering, cementing, adhesive bonding, or other surface-surface fusing or solid state joining processes.
In a preferred embodiment, to create the heat exchanger cell 20 embodiment as shown in
The heat exchange cell 20 may be formed by a typical oven-braze operation, joining the cell elements consisting of parting plates 1, 2, inner counter-flow matrix 3, header matrix elements 6 and 7, the edge bar 9 or flange 19, the external counter flow matrix segments 4, 5 and the circular reinforcing rings 10,11, 12, 13.
Stacking a plurality of individual heat exchange cells 20 as shown in
The final assembly of a heat exchanger core 21, comprising a plurality of cells 20 is produced by metallurgically bonding, e.g., welding, brazing, soldering, or diffusion bonding, the plurality of cells 20 at the surface of contact between contacting reinforcing rings 10 and 12 and between the surface of contact between contacting rings 11 and 13. The counter-flow matrix segments 4 contacting its neighbor 5 are not bonded, but may bear on one another. The conduit formed by the reinforcing rings 10 and 12, cutouts 15 and 25 in parting plates 1 and 2 serves as a manifold 22 for the fluid entering the heat exchanger core. Likewise, the conduit formed by the reinforcing rings 11 and 13, and cut-outs 97 and 27 in parting plates 1 and 2 serves as a manifold 23 for fluid exiting the heat exchanger core. Because the contact surface between the matrix element 4 and 5 of adjacent cells is not bonded, the cells 20 present little resistance to the independent thermal growth between the two manifold stacks 22 and 23. The assembled heat exchanger including the heat exchange core 21 further includes external ducting 24 (see
The heat exchanger 21 in
In operation, the first fluid 30 may be a low temperature, high-pressure fluid and the second fluid may be a high temperature, low-pressure fluid. By way of example, waste heat in a relatively low-pressure fluid 33 can be recovered via thermal transfer to a high-pressure fluid passing through the interior counter flow matrices 3 within the interior volumes 61 of the heat exchange cells 20. In a preferred embodiment, the first fluid 30 may be a working fluid such as compressed air for expansion through the turbine stage of a turbomachine, for example, to generate electrical and/or rotary shaft power and the second fluid 33 may be high-temperature, low-pressure turbine exhaust gas.
The second fluid 33 flows across the outer surface of the cross-flow header region 64 and enters the counter-flow matrix segments 4 and 5. The second fluid 33 exits the heat exchanger core 21, flowing over the outer cell surface of the cross-flow header region 65. The high surface area of the matrix elements 3, 4, and 5 and the small hydraulic diameters within such matrix segments enhance heat exchange between the first fluid 30 and the second fluid 33.
According to another embodiment, illustrated in
According to yet another embodiment, illustrated in
According to still another embodiment, illustrated in
The purpose of the porous-rings 52 and 53 are two-fold. First, the porous rings provide structural hoop strength to the manifold stacks 22 and 23. Second, when brazed to the surfaces of plates 1 and 2 at the intersection of the headers 6 and 7 with the manifold cutouts 15, 25 and 97, 27, the porous rings 52, 53 work in tension to resist a pressure force acting to separate plate 1 from plate 2.
According to an alternative embodiment, shown in
A further enhancement of the
An variation of the Z-flow concept shown in
The external fluid 73, needing no header fin, flows in a cross-counter flow manner, with a prevailing “C-flow” direction after entering and exiting the counterflow matrix. In certain embodiments of this arrangement, the external fluid 73 may enter and exit the header from both sides of the core, as shown. Alternatively, a flow arrangement wherein the external fluid 73 enters and exits the header from the same transverse side of the heat exchange core is also contemplated. The external fin arrangement shown in
A variation on the embodiment shown in
The invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Modifications and alterations will occur to others upon a reading and understanding of the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the invention be construed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) to U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/927,532 filed May 3, 2007. The aforementioned provisional application is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60927532 | May 2007 | US |