The invention relates to a multi channel heat exchanger for a refrigerant cycle. Heat exchangers of this type are used for example as condensers or evaporators in cooling- or heat pump cycles with a phase changing refrigerant.
Multi channel heat exchangers essentially include a distributor which distributes the refrigerant over plural heat exchanger pipes, plural heat exchanger pipes in which the refrigerant is brought into indirect contact with the medium to be cooled or heated and a collector in which the refrigerant is collected from the plural heat exchanger pipes that are typically run in parallel before the refrigerant eventually leaves the heat exchanger.
In the art multi channel heat exchangers are typically configured with a vertical arrangement of the distributors and collectors with horizontally arranged heat transfer pipes arranged there between, wherein the distributors and collectors are typically configured segmented so that portions for collecting and distributing refrigerant are implemented in a vertical component.
For many applications, however, a horizontal arrangement of the heat exchangers is desirable for space reasons or other reasons, so that the known refrigerant collection and -distribution in the customary manner with vertically arranged collector- and distributor portions within a component is omitted due to the small available configuration height.
A heat exchanger in horizontal arrangement or position can be derived from e.g. DE 101 11 384 B4. Due to the dimensions of the heat exchanger it is suitable in particular for large cooling- or heating pump systems that are arranged on flat roofs or on the ground.
Furthermore EP 1 046 875 A2 discloses a multi channel heat exchanger with horizontal arrangement which includes a horizontally arranged distributor tube and a horizontally arranged collector tube.
It is a disadvantage of the recited embodiment that effective oil separation and an effective coolant collector function have to be taken over by additional components which makes using horizontal heat exchangers more difficult and more expensive.
This yields the object to provide a heat exchanger which facilitates with lowest possible installation space and low installation height the refrigerant gas- or liquid distribution and oil separation before heat transfer in the heat exchanger tubes and refrigerant liquid or gas collection after heat transfer in the heat exchanger tubes with the option of phase separation of liquid and gaseous coolant phase.
According to the invention the object is achieved through a heat exchanger for a phase changing refrigerant including a horizontal distributor tube and a horizontal collector tube and a refrigerant carrying heat exchanger tubes connected there between, wherein the refrigerant inlet into the heat exchanger tubes is arranged in the upper portion of the cross section of the distributor tube and the coolant outlet from the heat exchanger tubes is arranged in the upper portion of the cross section of the collector tube for liquefaction operation of the multi channel heat exchanger so that oil separation is provided in the lower portion of the cross section of the distributor tube and refrigerant liquid separation is provided in the lower portion of the cross section of the collector tube.
According to the invention separating the liquid phase from the gas phase is implemented in the collector tube and also in the distributor tube through the arrangement of the means for extracting the phases in the respective portions of the horizontal collector- and distributor tubes. According to the invention the collection or distribution of the gaseous phase is respectively provided in the upper portion and the collection and distribution of the liquid phase is respectively provided in the lower portion of the cross section of the collector tube and the distributor tube.
Through the conceptional integration of these functions in the heat exchanger additional components for achieving these functions can be omitted in the respective refrigerant cycles. This saves space, installation space and cost during installations and operations of the coolant cycles configured with the heat exchanger according to the invention.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention, a horizontally arranged refrigerant gas- and oil filling spout are arranged at the distributor tube and a vertically arranged oil collector tube with oil return is arranged in the lower portion of the cross section of the distributor tube. During liquefaction operation the refrigerant gas/oil mix entering the distributor tube is separated, wherein the gaseous phase collects in the horizontal distributor tube in an upper portion and the liquid oil phase collects in the lower portion. The liquid oil phase is then extracted in the lower portion through the oil collector tube and the oil return, whereas the refrigerant vapor enters the heat exchanger tubes in the upper portion.
Advantageously the refrigerant gas inlet into the heat exchanger tube is configured in the upper portion of the cross section of the distributor tube through a gas inlet bend connected with the end of the heat exchanger tube. The gas inlet bend enters the distributor tube horizontally in the lower portion of the cross section of the distributor tube and eventually runs vertically upward forming a 90° bend. In the upper portion of the cross section of the distributor tube the gas inlet bend terminates with the opening for the refrigerant gas inlet. In order to optimize the separation effect and the flow mechanics the upper end of the gas inlet bend is configured slanted to form a maximum impact surface in flow direction of the refrigerant vapor for the refrigerant oil droplets.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention a vertically arranged liquid outlet spout for the liquid refrigerant phase is arranged in the lower portion of the cross section of the collector tube. The condensed liquid phase of the refrigerant collects density driven in the lower portion of the cross section of the collector tube and then runs out in downward direction through the liquid outlet spout.
Further advantageously the refrigerant liquid outlet from the heat exchanger tube is configured in the upper portion of the cross section of the collector tube through a liquid inlet bend. Thus, the horizontal heat transfer tube is connected with the horizontal end of the liquid inlet bend. The liquid inlet bend eventually runs to the collector tube forming a 90° bend in vertical downward direction and terminates with the opening for the refrigerant liquid inlet in the upper portion of the cross section of the collector tube.
The invention is advantageously implemented in that the ratio of the tube diameters of heat exchanger tubes to the distributor- or collector tubes is less than 0.7. Thus it is implemented that a sufficient volume is provided for the phase separation in the distributor tube and in the collector tube. According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention a ratio of 0.2-0.25 is considered optimum.
Additionally a connection for measuring instruments, sensors or similar is advantageously arranged at the collector tube.
The liquid outlet spout at the collector tube in the configuration of the heat exchanger as a condenser is preferably connected with a heat exchanger for super cooling the refrigerant liquid.
Alternatively the heat exchanger can be used as a flooded evaporator, wherein the horizontal distributor tube is in this case used as a collector and the horizontal collector tube is used as a distributor for the refrigerant.
Further details, features and advantages of embodiments of the invention can be derived from the subsequent description with reference to the associated drawing figures, wherein:
The collector tube 4 forms the lowest point of the heat exchanger 1 for accumulating the refrigerant liquid and the heat exchanger tubes 3 run into the upper portion of the cross section of the collector tube 4, preferably at the highest point for accumulating the refrigerant vapor and other gases.
The refrigerant vapor that is condensed in the heat exchanger 1 functioning as a condenser reaches the upper portion of the collector tube 4 as a liquid refrigerant and a separation of the possibly still provided refrigerant vapor and of the refrigerant liquid is performed over the cross section of the volume of the collector tube 4, so that the condensed liquid refrigerant phase collects in the lower portion and the gaseous phase of the refrigerant remains in the upper portion of the collector tube 4, wherein the option of reverse gas extraction is provided in each particular heat exchanger pipe 3 exiting from the collector tube 4. Additionally a connection 11 for measuring instruments 12, sensors or similar is advantageously arranged at the collector tube.
It is a particular advantage of the illustrated embodiment of the invention that the phase separation of the refrigerant is not performed outside of the condenser which is different from other heat exchanger concepts.
This has the effect that the super cooling the refrigerant remains in the heat exchanger which has a positive effect upon the efficiency of the process. This causes a lower volume for the components. Furthermore the gas pass through during a pressure change due to a load change is effectively suppressed which in turn causes an increase of the efficiency of the refrigerant cycle.
Multiple deflections of the flow direction of the refrigerant gas provide a separation of refrigerant oil droplets which were pulled along and which precipitate at the walls of the distributor tube 2 and of the gas inlet bends 9 and flow downward following the contours of the distributor tube 2 and collect in the lower portion of the distributor tube 2.
It is particularly advantageous in this embodiment with the gas inlet bends 9 that due to multiple flow direction changes the dynamic pressure of the refrigerant gas flow from the gas and oil filing spout 5 does not impact the heat exchanger tubes 3 and thus substantially reduces or completely excludes oil droplets from being pulled along by the refrigerant gas flow. It is another advantage of the invention that the configuratively improved distribution of the gas flow and the substantial prevention of the short circuit flows provides a more even surface loading of the heat exchanger 1. This means that the refrigerant gas flow is more evenly distributed over the heat exchanger tubes 3 which reduces the temperature differences in the heat exchanger and thus increases its efficiency.
Eventually the refrigerant oil is drained from the distributor tube 2 through the oil collector tube 7 and is routed back into the refrigerant cycle through an oil return 8 at a suitable location.
The refrigerant gas which eventually moves into the heat exchanger tubes 3 through the gas inlet bends 9 from the distributor tube 2 is now brought into indirect thermal contact with the cooling air flow and liquefied on the path through the heat exchanger 1 in downward direction. The outlet 14 of the liquefied refrigerant from the heat exchanger tube 3 is provided according to
The collector tube 4 includes a connector configured as liquid outlet spout 6 through which the condensate leaves the heat exchanger 1. An advantageous embodiment of the invention is not illustrated according to which a super cooler is connected to the liquid outlet spout 6 in which the condensed refrigerant is additionally super cooled for improving the efficient of the refrigerant cycle.
It is particularly advantageous in this embodiment of the invention that refrigerant vapor- and oil separation in the distributor tube 2 is performed in a particularly efficient manner through the additional surfaces of the outer jacket of the gas inlet bend 9 and thus only very little refrigerant oil reaches the heat exchanger tubes 3 since the oil is precipitated to a high degree in the distributor tube 2 and run out through the oil collector tube 7 and the oil return 8.
Through the rather large configuration of the distributor tube 2 and of the collector tube 4 the heat exchanger 1 can perform the function of the refrigerant collector, in particular through the volume of the collector tube 4 in a refrigerant cycle and the additional component of the collector within the refrigerant cycle can be omitted in its entirety. It is a particular advantage of the invention that the refrigerant filling volume can be reduced by 40-50% through this configuration.
It is particularly advantageous that the heat exchanger 1 can also be used as a flooded evaporator for example in a heat pump cycle. Thus, the distributor tube 2 forms the collector for the refrigerant gas from the evaporator and the collector tube 4 is the distributor for the refrigerant liquid in the functionally reversed heat exchanger 1 that is operating as a flooded evaporator.
Since refrigerant cycles of this type are operable with the heat exchanger without collector this yields numerous advantages. For example the refrigerant filling volumes in these cycles can be reduced through functional integration of the collector into the condenser which in addition to an ecologically and economically favorable minimization of the refrigerant filling amounts for the refrigerant cycle leads to a reduction of the size of refrigeration systems of this type and thus reduces cost during installation and implementation of such cycles.
It is particularly advantageous in a cycle of this type that undesirable oil propagation can be countered through integration of oil propagation into the distributor tube 2.
Another advantage of the implementation of the invention is that also an efficient reverse gas extraction is feasible in each particular heat exchanger pipe 3. Thus, complex measures for securing gas extraction within a refrigerant cycle are not required which leads to further cost reduction.
The concept of the invention is applicable for various heat exchanger tasks; a particularly important application of the invention is the configuration of the heat exchangers 1 as air cooled condenser.
As stated supra additional applications include using the heat exchanger 1 as flooded evaporator, for example for heat pump systems.
It is furthermore advantageous that connecting plural heat exchangers according to the invention in parallel is possible without the problems of uneven surface loading and temperature layering that is known in the art.
Advantageous applications for the heat exchangers 1 in refrigerant cycles are in the field of stationery refrigeration in particular for cooling super markets.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10164993 | Jun 2010 | EP | regional |
This application is a continuation of PCT/EP2011/058421, filed on May 24, 2011, claiming priority from European Patent Application EP 101 649 93.7, filed on Jun. 4, 2010, both of which are incorporated in their entirety by this reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130327503 A1 | Dec 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2011/058421 | May 2011 | US |
Child | 13687191 | US |