The invention concerns a heat medium distributor for an air inlet system including multiple heat exchangers, with
In many industrial processes, particularly painting, it is a requirement that the air which is brought into the treatment room should be conditioned, particularly heated. For this purpose, so-called air inlet systems, in which multiple heat exchangers are arranged in parallel to heat the air to be conditioned, are used. A heat medium distributor feeds heated heat medium, in most cases hot water, to the individual heat exchangers, and guides away the heat medium which has been cooled by passing through the heat exchanger.
Known heat medium distributors are produced by soldering or welding individual pieces of pipe to each other. This is associated with expensive manual work, which requires qualified personnel. Also, these known heat medium distributors are structurally relatively large, because all welds must be accessible. The consequence of this large construction is that the heat medium distributor is not normally fitted in the housing of the air inlet system, but must be placed on (not necessarily on top of) it. For this reason, they must be provided with expensive heat insulation.
The object of this invention is to create a heat medium distributor which is of the above-mentioned type, but can be produced more economically and requires less space.
According to the invention, this object is achieved in that
According to the invention, therefore, the heat medium distributor itself no longer consists of pieces of pipe, but essentially is in the form of a box-like housing, which—remotely from the air inlet system on which it is to be fitted—can be produced by largely automatic methods. In this way, the quality of the joins is improved at lower cost. With equally large or even larger flow paths, the box-like housing can be housed in a smaller space than the traditional heat medium distributors. With greater flow cross-sections, the flow rate and flow resistance are reduced, resulting in lower operating costs. The heat medium distributor according to the invention can be fitted in the housing of the air inlet system, and then tested, in the factory, and then transported together with the air inlet system to the end customer, so that the installation time on the end customer's premises is reduced.
Specially preferred is an embodiment of the invention in which the housing is divided by two dividing walls into three flow chambers, of which the first is used as the forward collection pipe and the second and third communicate with each other in one end area, and are used jointly as the return collection pipe. The heat medium which returns from the heat exchangers thus flows through the distributor in one direction, then makes a 180° turn and flows back in the opposite direction. In this way, the connections via which the hot heat medium is fed to the heat medium distributor, and the cooled heat medium is fed away from it, are provided in the same end area of the housing.
It is useful if the housing is put together out of commercially available semi-finished products. As such semi-finished products, flat plates or sheet metal, curved sheet metal or similar can be considered. These must be cut to shape if necessary and then joined to each other. This also reduces considerably the costs which are associated with the production of the heat medium distributor according to the invention.
In particular, the housing can be welded together out of steel parts.
In an advantageous embodiment of the invention, all forward and return connection nozzles are arranged on the same side of the housing, running approximately parallel to the dividing wall. The forward or return connection nozzles pass through the flow chamber which is adjacent to the relevant side of the housing. This heat medium distributor can therefore be arranged, for instance, above the various heat exchangers in the housing of the air inlet system, and can be connected directly to the connections of the individual heat exchangers via its connection nozzles.
Alternatively, it is possible to arrange the forward and return connection nozzles on a side of the housing running approximately perpendicularly to the dividing wall, offset laterally against each other and thus opening directly into the corresponding flow chambers. In this embodiment, it is unnecessary for the connection nozzles to penetrate through a flow chamber, which however in some circumstances makes a somewhat more expensive arrangement of pipes outside the distributor necessary.
The requirement for precision of the welds during production of the heat medium distributor itself, and production and fitting of the heat exchangers, can be reduced if the forward and/or return connection nozzles of the heat medium distributor each include a flexible connector, e.g. a piece of hose. In this way, it is easily possible to compensate for positional divergences of the connection nozzles of the heat medium distributor relative to the connections of the heat exchangers.
As mentioned above, because of the small construction of the heat medium distributor according to the invention, in many cases it is possible to house the heat medium distributor within the housing of the air inlet system. In this case, the housing of the heat medium distributor itself no longer requires thermal insulation, resulting in another significant cost advantage.
An embodiment of the invention is explained in more detail below on the basis of the drawings.
The heat medium distributor which is shown in the drawings, and which as a whole has the reference symbol 1, is used to feed heat medium, for instance hot water, to multiple heat exchangers. These heat exchangers, which are not shown in the drawings, are in an air inlet system such as is found, for instance, in painting plants, and there conditions, particularly heats, the inlet air for the spray cabin.
The heat medium distributor 1 has a box-shaped housing 2, which essentially is produced from commercially available sheet metal semi-finished products. This housing 2 comprises a rectangular, flat top side 2a, a correspondingly shaped rectangular, flat bottom side 2b, two curved side walls 2c and 2d which are semicircular in cross-section, and two correspondingly shaped end walls 2e and 2f, which can be understood as rectangles with semicircular surface sections placed on their narrow sides.
The housing 2 is divided by two dividing walls 3, 4, which extend perpendicularly to the housing top and bottom sides 2b and are tightly joined to them, into a total of three flow chambers 5, 6, 7.
As shown by, in particular,
Between the lower side wall 2b in
The second dividing wall 4 is put on the dividing wall 3 at a certain distance from the dividing wall section 3b and parallel to it, with a section 4a which in turn extends by about a third of the longitudinal dimension of the end walls 2e and 2f in the direction of the upper side wall 2c in
The internal space of the housing 2, between the first dividing wall 3 and the upper side wall 2c in
Into the widened area 5a of the first flow chamber 5, an inlet nozzle 8, via which the hot heat medium can be brought into the first flow chamber 5 of the distributor 1, opens from above, i.e. passing through the top side 2a of the housing, approximately in the centre of the transverse dimension of the top side 2a of the housing. Similarly, into the widened area 7a of the third flow chamber 7, a return flow nozzle 9, via which the medium which has flowed through the distributor 1 and the heat exchangers can be guided away, opens from above, passing through the top side 2a of the housing.
On the side wall 2d of the housing 2, at the bottom of
All parts of the distributor 1 preferably consist of steel, and are tightly welded at the places where they are joined to each other.
Because of its comparatively small dimensions, the distributor 1 described above can be fitted within the housing of the air inlet system, directly adjacent to the heat exchangers. This has the advantage that the distributor 1, unlike the previously known distributors which were put together out of individual pieces of pipe, and had to be arranged outside the housing of the air inlet system, does not have to be insulated. When the distributor 1 is fitted, the inlet nozzle 8 is connected to the house-side forward pipe of the heat medium, the return flow nozzle 9 is connected to the house-side return pipe of the heat medium, the forward connection nozzles 10 are connected to the corresponding forward connections of the heat exchangers, and finally the return connection nozzles 11 are connected to the return connections of the individual heat exchangers. Because of the flexible hose pieces 10a, 11a, it is possible to compensate for certain dimensional divergences in the position of the connections of the heat exchangers, so that to this extent it is unnecessary to maintain high welding precision.
In the operation of the air inlet system, hot heat medium flows via the inlet nozzle 8 on the top side 2a of the distributor 1 into the first flow chamber 5. It is fed from there via the forward connection nozzles 10 in the lower side surface 2d in
The arrangement of forward and return connection nozzles 10 and 11 respectively, via which the individual heat exchangers are supplied, corresponds to the Tichelmann principle. This means that the path of the heat medium through the distributor 1 and heat exchangers is of equal length for each individual heat exchanger, so that all heat exchangers are supplied with heat medium in the same way.
The described distributor 1 can be in modular form. This means that at least in its central area it consists of identical sections, in each of which the three described flow chambers 5, 6, 7 are formed and which have a certain number of connection nozzles 10, 11 for heat exchangers. However, the widened areas 5a, 7a of the flow chambers 5, 7, the inlet nozzle 8 and the return nozzle 9 in the top side 2a of the housing, and the connection between the flow chambers 6 and 7, are absent from these central sections of the distributor 1.
In an embodiment of the invention (not shown in the drawings), the third flow chamber 7 is absent. The heat medium is therefore not fed back to near that part of the housing 2 in which the inflow takes place. The inlet nozzle 8 and return nozzle 9 in the top side of the housing 2 are therefore at opposite end areas of the housing 2.
It may be possible to do without the hose pieces 10a, 11a in the inlet connection nozzles 10 and return connection nozzles 11, if care is taken for high precision in the case of the welds of the distributor 1 and in the fitting of the heat exchangers. Such rigid connection nozzles 10, 11 are obviously more economical.
In the case of the embodiment which is presented above on the basis of the drawings, all connection nozzles 10, 11 for the heat registers are arranged on that side 2d of the housing 2 which runs approximately parallel to the dividing wall 3. This makes it necessary that the return connection nozzles 11 penetrate the flow chamber 5 so that they can open into the flow chamber 6. These penetrations are avoided in an embodiment (not shown in the drawings), in which the connection nozzles 10, 11 are arranged on a side of the housing 2 running approximately perpendicularly to the dividing wall, for instance on its bottom side 2b. By a certain lateral displacement of the return connection nozzles 11 relative to the forward connection nozzles 10, it is possible for all connection nozzles 10, 11 to open directly into the correct flow chamber 5, 6 in each case.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10325657.1 | Jun 2003 | DE | national |