The invention relates to a thermal exchanger, in particular for use in a motor vehicle and to a collecting plate of such an exchanger.
Such exchangers, for example radiators for cooling the engine, have a succession of elongate tubes wherein circulates a coolant fluid. Thermal exchanges occur between the coolant fluid and the fluid externally in contact with the tubes, usually air.
Two collecting boxes receive the respective ends of these tubes, thus ensuring that fluid of the tubes is placed in communication with one another. These boxes each comprise a cover and a manifold in the form of a plate.
The sealing of the junction between the cover and the manifold is usually achieved by means of a seal extending along the edge of the box. As an option, the edge of the manifold can be formed as a slot or groove forming a housing for this seal. This groove also ensures the relative positioning of the cover and the manifold.
The manifold is perforated with holes suitable for the passage of the tubes such that the latter lead to the inside of a respective collecting box at each of their ends. Once in place, the tubes are secured to the manifold, usually by brazing.
In order to enhance the rigidity of the connection between each tube and the manifold, it is common practice to form a zone of the box surrounding each of the holes into a collar of material. Each collar increases the guide length of the tube in the hole and increases the surface area available for the brazing of the tube to the cover.
The collars are obtained by pushing back the material of the manifold during the production of the holes. The height of the collars, that is to say the distance by which they protrude from the plate, usually on the inside of the collecting box, is linked to the thickness of the material used: the thicker the material, the higher the collars.
For reasons of reliability, the end of the tubes protrudes from the collar to the inside of the collecting box. In the regions of the collecting boxes situated between the end portions of the tubes that protrude from the collars, and those situated between the collars themselves, the coolant fluid that flows in the box forms vortexes. The latter generate internal pressure losses and adversely affect the performance of the exchanger. Moreover, the regions in question constitute “dead” zones, that is to say zones that are practically useless to the operation of the exchanger.
EP 0990868 B1 proposes to reduce these pressure losses by having the collars protrude on the side of the manifold outside the collecting box. The collars are formed by piercing the holes in the opposite direction to the direction of insertion of the tubes, that is to say from the inside of the manifold to the outside of the latter. This makes the assembly of the exchanger difficult, or even unachievable, because the holes then have no insertion cone: the cone formed when pushing back the material of the manifold has a narrowing direction opposite to the direction of insertion of the tubes.
The situation is aggravated by the fact that the tubes must usually be installed together simultaneously for reasons of production rate.
And this situation becomes yet worse for exchangers with a reduced pitch (the distance separating the axes of two adjacent tubes), typically between 5 and 8 millimeters approximately.
FR 2 783 903 proposes to join an additional plate to the manifold against the inside face of the latter. The space between the portions of the tubes protruding from the collars, in this instance internal collars, is filled by the additional plate. The latter also increases the resistance of the assembly to the swaging forces and protects the ends of the tubes. This plate however is an additional part to be manufactured and to be assembled to the rest of the exchanger. The result of this is an increase in production costs.
EP 1 384 968 proposes to make the box in several portions: a first, intermediate, portion is swaged onto the manifold while a second, external, portion is secured to the first by bonding, swaging or welding. The intermediate portion is formed so as to make the tubes easier to insert. In this case, the drawbacks associated with the addition of an extra part to the exchanger arise again.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,327,959 proposes through-holes furnished with a bevel. The latter is formed so as to prevent the tubes from penetrating the inside of the collecting box. The risk of creating a vortex is then avoided. However, the zone designed for the contact between the bevels and the ends of the tubes being very reduced, there is no assurance that this contact takes place for all the tubes, nor that the brazing can take or hold in this location. Finally, the mechanical strength of the exchanger is reduced.
The object of the invention is to improve the existing situation. The intended exchanger comprises at least one elongate tube adapted to the circulation of a coolant fluid and at least one collecting box for such a fluid into which one end of said tube leads, the collecting box comprising a manifold having a receiving element for the end of said tube, the receiving element comprising an inwardly protruding portion formed in a retention zone for this tube. According to the invention, the receiving element also comprises a connecting portion for connecting the inwardly protruding portion to the rest of the manifold and this connecting portion protrudes on the side of the manifold opposite to the collecting box so that the inwardly protruding portion and the connecting portion have mutually opposite protruding directions.
By virtue of this configuration of the exchanger, it becomes possible to place the end of the tubes below a plane containing the upper face of the manifold. This prevents the creation of any vortex. It however retains the advantages of a sufficient guide length of the tube in the orifice and an easier insertion. Incidentally, this also makes it possible to reduce the length of the tubes and hence to make raw material savings.
The inwardly protruding portion rises toward the inside of the collecting box. The receiving element is formed in the manifold. The protruding portion has an orifice with a cross section suitable for an end zone of the tube to pass.
According to various embodiments:
The invention also relates to a collecting plate for a heat exchanger furnished with the features described above.
Other features and advantages of the invention will appear on examination of the following detailed description and of the appended drawings in which:
The appended drawings may not only serve to supplement the invention but also contribute to its definition if necessary.
The exchanger 1 comprises elongate tubes 3 for the circulation of a coolant fluid, said tubes being placed in a cluster. The tubes 3 are aligned in one or more rows or layers.
Each of the ends of each of the tubes 3 leads into a respective collecting box 5. The exchanger 1 thus comprises two analogous collecting boxes 5 which place the tubes 3 in fluidic communication with one another. The collecting boxes 5 have a generally parallelepipedal appearance. They are placed facing one another.
Each time, between two adjacent tubes 3 there is a heat-exchange insert 7 of corrugated form and in which the top of each of the oscillations is in contact with one of the two adjacent tubes 3.
In operation, the exchanger 1 allows a thermal exchange between the coolant fluid circulating in the tubes 3 and a fluid passing outside the exchanger, usually air.
The manifold 9 has a central portion 10 and a border portion 11 surrounding this central portion 10. The central portion 10 has a plurality of through-orifices 12 suitable in shape and in position for the insertion and the passage of an end portion of the tubes 3.
The border portion 11 has a circumferential groove or slot 13 suitable for the housing of a seal 14. The seal 14 is used to seal the assembly of the cover and manifold 9 of the box. A peripheral portion 15 of the manifold 9 is folded so as to protrude, almost perpendicularly, from the central portion 10. This peripheral portion is designed to come close to the lateral walls of the cover and to swage it onto the manifold.
The central portion 10 extends between two planes that are parallel with one another and with the general extension plane of the manifold 9:
According to one aspect of the invention, the end of the tubes 3 received in the orifices 12 is substantially on the internal envelope plane 16 or slightly short of it.
The manifold 9 is formed so as to have a portion forming a collar 19 which borders the orifice 12. This collar 19 protrudes from the internal surface of the manifold 9 in a direction practically perpendicular to the general extension plane of this manifold 9 and going from the external envelope face 17 to the internal envelope face 16. The free end of the collar 19 is set back from the internal envelope plane 16. The collar 19 is made by pushing back material of the plate, such that a slight narrowing of the section of the orifice 12 is formed on the external surface of the manifold 9.
A connecting portion 21 connects the collar 19 to the same portion 21 corresponding to the passageway of the next tube. The connecting portion 21 is made in the form of a portion that protrudes from the manifold 9 in a direction perpendicular to the general extension plane, going from the internal envelope plane 16 to the external envelope plane 17. This connecting portion is situated beneath the general extension plane.
In other words, the manifold 9 has, in the vicinity of each orifice 12, a receiving element for the end of a tube 3 that comprises an inwardly protruding portion formed as a retention zone for this tube, a portion for connecting the protruding portion to the manifold, this connecting portion protruding on the side of the manifold 9 that is opposite to the collecting box, the protruding portion and the connecting portion having mutually opposite protruding directions.
In this instance, the orifices 12 are adapted to the passage of tubes that are known as flat, that is to say of which the cross section is delimited by two long straight edges parallel with one another and connected together, on each occasion, by a semicircular edge. The collars 19 follow the shape of the orifices 12 that can be called oblong.
In this instance, the connecting portion 21 is made by forming the coverplate 9 locally as an elongate boss along the length of the orifices 12. In cross section, the boss has an undulating appearance. This undulation may extend over practically the whole direction concerned, in particular when there are several rows of tubes: it is then possible to use one and the same connecting portion 21 for several collars 19 aligned in their longitudinal direction.
The collars 19 are attached at their base to their respective connecting portion 23 by means of a bend 23 which also makes the insertion of the tubes easier.
Each collar 19 can also be seen as a bead of material surrounding the orifice 12.
In
As can be seen in
In a first step, illustrated in
In a second step, illustrated in
In a third step, illustrated in
The invention is not limited to the embodiments described above only as examples, but embraces all the variants that those skilled in the art can envisage. In particular, the shape of the cross section of the tubes 3 may be different from that described, for example round, “bean-shaped”, rectangular or another shape. The number of layers of tubes can also vary. And all while remaining within the context of the invention, the retention zones may protrude slightly inwardly beyond the internal envelope plane.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 52447 | Mar 2010 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2011/054843 | 3/29/2011 | WO | 00 | 3/8/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/120977 | 10/6/2011 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
103 60 472 | Jul 2004 | DE |
10 2006 045 200 | Apr 2008 | DE |
0 990 868 | Apr 2000 | EP |
1 384 968 | Jan 2004 | EP |
2 783 903 | Mar 2000 | FR |
2002 267389 | Sep 2002 | JP |
Entry |
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International Search Report w/translation from PCT/EP2011/054843 mailed on Nov. 28, 2011 (4 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130160973 A1 | Jun 2013 | US |