The invention relates to a heat exchanger, particularly for a heating or air conditioning unit in a motor vehicle.
In low-consumption vehicles because of the small amount of waste heat available, additional heat capacity is required in order to heat the passenger space and for the rapid elimination of a coating (ice or water) particularly on the windshield. For this purpose, it is known in heat exchangers constructed from flat tubes through which flows a heat transfer medium which emits heat in a heating situation, to provide, at least on the outer tubes, an additional heating in the form of PTC heating elements. However, the mounting of PTC heating elements of this type is highly complicated.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,124,570 proposes to replace individual tubes of the heat exchanger by PTC heating elements held between contact plates which at the same time make a heat-conducting connection to the adjacent ribs. This has the disadvantage that the structural adaption of the heat exchanger in order to receive PTC heating elements and the PTC heating elements themselves are very costly. For this reason, it may be that a combined heat exchanger of this type is more costly than a combination of a conventional heat exchanger with a separate PTC heater. Also, due to the construction space requirement for the PTC heating elements and the contacting of these, the power density of the heat exchanger is markedly impaired. The replacement of individual tubes of the heat exchanger may also be gathered from DE 44 36 791 A1 and DE 100 12 320 A1.
Furthermore, it is proposed in DE 198 58 499 A1, to design the flat tubes as multichamber profiles and to design at least one of the outer chambers in the form of an insertion groove for an insulated resistance wire, the walls of said insertion groove then being bent together in order to fasten the resistance wire. The resistance wire is inserted after the soldering of the heat exchanger. This has the disadvantage that a heat exchanger of this type requires special flat tubes and a large part of the electrically introduced heating capacity is absorbed into the coolant.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,178,292 B1 discloses a heat exchanger with an electrical heater which is arranged within a carrier element and which is pushed between two adjacent rib sets. In this case, the carrier element includes a pair of parallel plates, between which an electrical heating element is held and is contacted electrically. The electrical heater consists of a heating element and of an insulation element and has a multilayer construction through which a heating current passes essentially perpendicularly to the individual layers. Fastening elements, which run perpendicular to the carrier element and heater, are provided for the fastening. A heat exchanger of this type still leaves much to be desired, particularly as regards the multiplicity and number of parts and consequently the production costs of the heating body as a whole.
The object of the invention is to make available an improved and more cost-effective heat exchanger.
According to the invention, a heat exchanger, particularly for a heating or air conditioning unit in a motor vehicle, with a plurality of flat tubes which are arranged parallel to one another and through which a heat transfer medium flows, is provided, which has, outside and preferably on the air outflow side of the flat tubes, a heating element which runs parallel to the flat tubes. In this case, a holding element, which likewise runs parallel to the flat tubes, is provided for the heating element. The heating element is arranged outside the flat tubes. In particular, by the choice of the heat-conducting cross sections from the heating element to the flat tubes through which the heat transfer medium flows, the heat flow is minimized and the heat flow discharged to the air via rib surfaces is maximized. The holding element is preferably a holding grid, in which case the holding element may also be formed directly by the heat exchanger, particularly the rib sets of the latter, preferably when these project. A plurality of heating elements and/or of holding elements may also be provided. The heating element is preferably a component of grid-like design, preferably made from high-grade steel. For optimum heat transfer, the heating element is connected thermally conductively to the holding element and/or is mounted on the heat exchanger.
According to one embodiment, the holding element is mounted on a flat tube. In this case, a conventional flat tube may be used, to which the holding element is fixed, for example by means of soldering, and the heating element is subsequently introduced. Mounting preferably takes place on a narrow side face of the flat tube, said side face pointing outward, that is to say, away from the heat exchanger.
According to an alternative embodiment the holding element is mounted on one or more ribs. In this case, the ribs are led beyond the flat tubes so that the holding element can be fixed between the ribs.
According to a further alternative embodiment the holding element is formed directly by ribs. In this case, the ribs are led beyond the flat tubes so that the heating element can be fixed directly or else indirectly between the ribs.
In order to avoid damage to the heating element, the ribs may be rounded or provided with a chamfer on one, but preferably on both sides, thus making it easier to introduce the holding and/or heating element.
According to a preferred embodiment, the heating element is designed as a heating grid. In this case, the holding element is preferably formed by a holding grid, in which case the heating grid may also be held directly by the ribs serving as holding element.
To avoid a short circuit, the heating element or heating elements and/or the holding element or holding elements have an insulating coating or are provided with such a coating, for example with Teflon or an insulating lacquer. Preferably, in this case, an aluminum holding grid is provided which is insulated electrically by means of anodizing. However, other electrically nonconductive or poorly conducting coatings or surface treatments are also possible.
By the resistance being increased by means of a meander structuring of the heating grid, the current flow through a section can be markedly reduced. This affords the possibility of using cost-effective polymeric PTC elements of low current carrying capacity for thermal protection.
Preferably, one or more excess temperature cutouts are provided, which, in particular, are interposed directly in the heating section. These may be, for example, series-connected thermal switches. Bimetallic switches, polymeric PTCs, ceramic PTCs or fusible cutouts are essentially considered for this purpose. Preferably, in this case, what are known as polyswitch or polyfuse elements are used which are in thermal contact either with the heating body itself or with the air flowing through the latter. Owing to their intrinsic heating when the discharge of heat is too low, these can practically break the respective heating circuit. These known protective elements are based on conductive polymers which have a pronounced PTC effect. That is to say, when a certain temperature (reference temperature) is exceeded their electrical resistance rises by several orders of magnitude and the current intensity decreases correspondingly, with the result that electrical power is reduced to values near zero. Alternatively to these polymeric PTC elements, however, bimetallic switches may also be used, which either are in thermal contact with the heating body itself or are arranged in the airstream which also flows through the heating body. In the latter instance, the bimetallic switches are designed in terms of their electrical resistance in such a way that, on account of the current flow, they have low intrinsic heating which, however, is not so low that the cutoff temperature is reached when an airstream flows around them. Only when the airstream falls below a critical value due to a system fault does the intrinsic heating of the bimetallic switch result in the cutoff temperature being reached.
In a preferred embodiment, these excess temperature cutouts are in direct heat-conducting contact with the heating body and are part of the heating grid which is located in a holding grid.
The invention is explained in detail below by means of exemplary embodiments, with reference to the drawing in which:
a and 12b show a tenth exemplary embodiment,
a–c show various circuits of heating grids with excess temperature cutouts,
a–21f show various heating grid cross sections.
A heat exchanger 1 according to the invention for an air conditioning unit of a motor vehicle, particularly for a low-consumption vehicle, with a plurality of flat tubes 2 which are arranged parallel to one another and through which a heat transfer medium flows and with rib sets 3 arranged between the flat tubes 2, has electrically operated heating elements 4 as additional heating which can be connected as required. The flat tubes 2 are connected to a system 133 for circulating a first heat transfer medium through each of the flat tubes 2, schematically depicted in
The holding grid 6 is produced from a metal sheet which is provided by means of a forming operation with beads 7 serving for subsequent soldering, in which case soldering may take place simultaneously with the soldering of the remaining heat exchanger, since the heating elements 4 cannot, as a rule, be exposed to the soldering operation.
The mounting of the heating elements 4 is illustrated in detail in
The beads 7 on the one hand, serve for positioning the holding grid 6 and the heating elements 4 and, on the other hand, form a heat-conducting connection to the heat exchanger 1, in order to utilize part of the rib surface of the latter for the transfer of heat to the air flowing through.
Depending on the electrical resistance, on-board voltage and desired electrical heating power, the individual heating elements 4 may be connected by means of a parallel and/or series connection in a way not illustrated in any more detail. For power regulation, a pulse-width modulation method is used, but other methods for power regulation are also possible.
Three very similar exemplary embodiments are described below with reference to
In the other two exemplary embodiments illustrated in
Alternatively, in a similar way to the first exemplary embodiment, the holding elements 25 and 35 may be soldered in at the same time as the manufacture of the heat exchanger without heating elements 24 and 34 and be provided with the heating elements 24 and 34 thereafter.
According to the fifth exemplary embodiment illustrated in
According to the first exemplary embodiment, the heating elements 44 are inserted and crimped in after soldering. In the present exemplary embodiment, only every second row of flat tubes 42 is equipped with heating elements 44, but any other desired variants are also possible.
According to the ninth exemplary embodiment illustrated in
This is essentially a heat exchanger of conventional type of construction, in which the gilled corrugated rib is replaced by a deeper rib, with the result that the rib projects beyond the flat tube 82 in order to receive the holding grid 86 and the heating grid 84′ embedded in the latter. The holding grid may also be formed by individual U profiles which are not interconnected or by correspondingly pre-bent sheet metal strips.
The heating grid is produced, for example, by stamping and subsequent forming from one piece, a combination of parallel-connected and series-connected regions being possible in the present instance (cf.
To avoid short circuits between the heating grid 84′ and the holding grid 86, the heating grid 84′ is provided with an insulation layer 84″. This insulation layer 84″ is formed by an insulating lacquer. So that the width B of the current supply and current distributor strips of the heating grid of
According to a further tenth exemplary embodiment, a heating grid 104′ serving as a heating element 104 is designed in such a way that it can be pushed in directly on the air outflow side between rib sets 103 projecting on the end face beyond the coolant-carrying flat tubes, without the risk of damage to the insulation layer and of a short circuit possibly resulting from this. According to the exemplary embodiment, the insulation layer is formed by a Teflon coating, but it may also be formed, for example, by correspondingly suitable lacquers, in particular stoving lacquers with sufficient temperature resistance, or the like.
Additional protection is afforded by a slight forming of the projecting ribs in the region of their corners, so that an introduction slope for the heating grid 104′ is obtained. Forming may take place before the soldering of the heating body block or else thereafter, as illustrated in
After the forming operation, as illustrated in
By a folding in, if appropriate even multiple folding in of edge zones, for example also sheet edge zones, the material thickness and therefore the current-conducting cross section is enlarged. The same may, of course, also be achieved correspondingly by a use of what are known as tailored blanks as base material for the stamped sheets, and in these the edge zones assigned to connecting webs are of thicker design.
For this purpose, the entire structure of the heating elements is divided into a plurality of and consequently higher-impedance parallel heating circuits which are protected individually by means of more cost-effective overheating cutouts based, for example, on polymeric PTC elements. Thus, it is possible, inter alia, to prevent the electrical connecting bridges between individual heating sections from being overheated. Various circuits are illustrated in
By use of other circuits, as illustrated, for example, in
Intermediate cooling of the current bridges 131 by heat contact with the rib sets may take place in that, according to
Alternatively to the illustration in
According to a twelfth exemplary embodiment illustrated in
To coordinate the resistance with the desired heating capacity, the specific resistance and also the area and thickness of the polymeric PTC material employed may be used and/or the resistance is adapted by means of circuitry measures. For this purpose, for example, the voltage may be supplied at first portions of middle electrodes.
According to
In this thirteenth exemplary embodiment with a middle electrode for contacting a polymeric PTC layer as a continuous heating element within a holding grid, a metallic heating conductor is dispensed with completely. As a result of the PTC characteristic, the heating structure itself is safe and requires no additional overheating protection.
The heating grid and/or holding grid may be bent according to the cross sections illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 21 967 | May 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP03/05109 | 5/15/2003 | WO | 00 | 11/8/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/098124 | 11/27/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6124570 | Ebner et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6178292 | Fukuoka et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6265692 | Umebayahi et al. | Jul 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
44 36 791 | Apr 1996 | DE |
198 58 499 | Jun 2000 | DE |
100 12 320 | Sep 2000 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050150885 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |