The present invention relates to a heat exchanger with welded heat-exchange plates, in order to achieve an exchange of heat between a first fluid and a second fluid.
Already known, notably through European patent No. EP 0639258 B1 from the same inventor, is a heat exchanger with welded heat-exchange plates, of compact structure, bearing the commercial name “HEATEX” (registered trademark), comprising previously swaged metal plates, assembled by twos by welding on two opposite sides, and thereby forming stacked modular elements defining two independent circuits respectively for a first fluid and for a second fluid. All the plates, thus joined, form a heat-exchange block of rectangular horizontal section, hence generally parallelepipedal, which is assembled to four posts or corner uprights belonging to the frame of the heat exchanger. The open ends of the stacked modular elements are welded by being placed alongside one another on the edge of openings made in the opposite vertical connecting walls of the heat-exchange block. The heat exchanger is closed by four side doors screwed onto the uprights of the frame and easily removable for maintenance.
In particular, European patent No. EP 0639258 B1 offers a solution which removes the stresses of differential expansion, between the heat-exchange block constituted by all the stacked plates, on the one hand, and the frame on the other hand, thanks to “corner gutters” that are secured to the aforementioned connecting walls, and that partially surround the uprights of the frame, with the possibility of relative sliding.
Thanks to these arrangements, the heat exchanger according to European patent No. EP 0639258 B1 has advantageous features, in terms of behavior at temperature, relative to the prior embodiments, also known, of heat exchangers with welded plates, such as those described in European patent applications EP 0165179 A and EP 0186592 A.
However, the heat exchanger with welded heat-exchange plates according to European patent No. EP 0639258 B1 still poses certain problems, and therefore remains perfectable, for uses under considerable thermomechanical stresses.
In particular, when the heat-exchange block is set at temperature, because of the temperature gradient that prevails in service, the heat-exchange plates tend to expand lengthwise, in a direction perpendicular to the connecting walls situated at their ends. The corresponding expansion stress is calculated by the ratio F/S, F being the expansion force and S the section of the weld withstanding this stress.
When the expansion is considerable, the stress is also and this may result in a breakage of the welds connecting the two plates associated in a modular element, a breakage which occurs notably level with the zone where the heat-exchange plates and the adjacent connecting wall are alongside.
It is therefore appropriate to reduce the level of stresses at this location, in order to bring it to a value below the breaking threshold, by a reduction of the expansion force and/or by an increase of the weld section.
The invention provides enhancements to the heat exchanger with welded plates, as described in European patent No. EP 0639258 B1, for the purpose of enhancing its behavior at temperature, and notably to prevent the risk of breakage under the effect of the expansion stresses.
Accordingly, the essential subject of the invention is a heat exchanger with welded heat-exchange plates, of the type considered above, that is to say comprising previously swaged metal plates assembled in twos by welding on two opposite sides in order to form stacked modular elements defining two independent circuits respectively for a first fluid and for a second fluid, the ends of the heat-exchange plates being welded by being placed alongside one another on the edge of openings made in the opposite connecting walls, perpendicular to said plates, in order to form an overall parallelepipedal heat-exchange block which is assembled to four posts or corner uprights belonging to the frame of the heat exchanger, this exchanger being characterized in that, on their sides to be assembled, the two swaged metal plates constituting each modular element are on each side pressed flat against one another over a predefined width, are joined together by a first weld made in this width and providing the mechanical cohesion of the assembly, and are also joined together along their outer edges by a second weld providing the seal.
Therefore, the invention replaces the usual “edge-to-edge” assembly of the two swaged plates with a particular configuration consisting in carrying out a “dimpling” of one of the plates and even of both plates, so that both plates are juxtaposed over a predefined width, preferably at least equal to fifteen millimeters, allowing the achievement of a double weld.
The first weld, which is a spot weld or a laser weld or an electrode wheel weld, ensures the mechanical cohesion of the assembly, that is to say its resistance to pressure. The second weld, which is advantageously a weld of the “TIG” or “plasma” type, for its part simply ensures the seal. The total weld section is therefore greatly increased, making the assembly of the plates much stronger.
According to another aspect of the present invention, each post or corner upright of the frame of the heat exchanger with welded heat-exchange plates has a beveled inner edge, the adjacent connecting wall being connected to the post or corner upright in the region of this beveled edge.
Therefore, when the heat-exchange plates tend to expand, they may take with them the connecting walls which then comprise a possibility of additional deformation, by bending in the space released by the beveled edges of the posts or corner uprights. The expansion stress is therefore absorbed largely by the bending, now made possible, of the connecting wall.
According to an advantageous additional arrangement, each connecting wall comprises, in its two lateral zones, bellows-like conformations for its connection to the post or corner upright, in the region of the beveled edge. The bellows-like conformations, which may each consist simply of two inverted folds together forming a sort of sinewave, facilitate, as required, an expansion along an axis perpendicular to the direction of longitudinal expansion of the heat-exchange plates. As is easy to understand, the beveled edges of the posts or uprights offer a free space used here not only for the bending of the connecting walls, but also for the housing and the deformation of the bellows-like conformations.
In any case, the invention will be better understood with the aid of the following description, with reference to the appended schematic drawings representing, as an example, one embodiment of this heat exchanger with welded heat-exchange plates.
With reference to
These modular elements 2 have a very elongated section, and their ends are welded, by being placed alongside, on the edges of parallel openings 4 arranged in the connecting walls 3.
These connecting walls 3 are themselves assembled, along their longitudinal edges (vertical in this instance), to posts or corner uprights 5, that are four in number. The bottom and top ends of the posts or corner uprights 5 are assembled, respectively, to a bottom support and a top support, not shown in
Inside this frame, which is closed on its lateral faces by doors not shown, all of the modular elements 2 form a heat-exchange block, itself of generally parallelepipedal shape, which defines two independent fluid circuits, namely a first fluid circuit consisting of the modular elements 2, and a second fluid circuit resulting from the free spaces situated between these modular elements 2. Inlet and outlet hoses, for the two fluid circuits thus formed, are also provided.
For a more detailed description of this type of heat exchanger, reference is made to the aforementioned European patent No. EP 0 639 258 B1.
With reference to
More particularly,
Still considering one side of the modular element 2, the welded assembly of the end of the latter to the connecting wall is carried out, in the illustrated example (for plates of a thickness of 1.5 mm), over a section of 2×2.8 mm×1.5 mm, or 8.4 mm2, and this welded assembly has a concentration of stresses at a point, level with the longitudinal weld 8.
By this lateral band 11, of width L, the plate 7 is pressed flat against the lateral region of the plate 6. The two plates 6 and 7 are then joined to one another, in the width L, by a first weld 12 which may be a spot weld or a laser weld or an electrode wheel weld, ensuring the mechanical strength of the assembly.
The two plates 6 and 7 are also joined to one another, along their outer edges, by a second weld 13 which is notably a weld of the “TIG” type, by which in this instance simply the seal is ensured.
Advantageously, the two plates 6 and 7 are therefore juxtaposed in the lateral region of the modular element 2, over a width L equal to at least fifteen millimeters.
Supposing that this width L is strictly equal to 15 mm, and everything else remaining equal, the embodiment according to the invention achieves, at the assembly of the end of the modular element 2 to the connecting wall, a weld section equal to: [(2×15)+5.6+4]×1.5 or 59.4 mm2, instead of the 8.4 mm2 obtained with the current method of assembly. The mechanically strong weld section is therefore multiplied by more than 7, in other words increased by more than 600%.
Therefore, when the modular element 2 tends to expand, in the direction of the arrow F, it may carry with it the adjacent connecting wall 3, which can bend by entering the free space 17, the first point of rigidity P1 being removed. The expansion stress is therefore largely absorbed by the bending of the connecting wall 3.
In addition, as also shown in
It should be noted that the heat exchanger described above may be produced equally with swaged plates provided with a network of bosses, or dishes, or with swaged plates having parallel ribs or grooves, or else with smooth plates provided with fitted mounting blocks, according to all configurations known per se. These heat-exchange plates may consist of simple metal sheets, for example made of stainless steel. In particular applications, they may also be metal sheets called “sandwich” metal sheets, made on one face with a stainless steel support layer, sufficiently thick to ensure resistance to the pressure, and on the other face by a thin layer made of precious metal or alloy, particularly nickel-based, tantalum-based or zirconium-based. It will be noted that the arrangements of the present invention are particularly suitable for assembling such “sandwich” metal sheets together. Specifically, with the usual technique, during the edge-to-edge welding of such metal sheets, there is a certain risk of a rise of ferrite in the melted metal core, by migration effect. The risk of corrosion is then considerable, the weld produced not having the characteristics of the precious metal. On the other hand, by, in this instance, applying the technique of the present invention, as illustrated by
Heat exchangers with welded heat-exchange plates, produced according to the invention, may find industrial applications in varied fields: the chemical and pharmaceutical industry, the agribusiness industry, heating installations, etc.
It goes without saying, and as emerges from the foregoing, that the invention is not limited solely to the embodiment of a heat exchanger that has been described above, as an example; on the contrary it embraces all the embodiment and application variants observing the same principles. In this way, in particular, a user would not depart from the context of the invention:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0604244 | May 2006 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR07/00792 | 5/10/2007 | WO | 00 | 4/15/2009 |