The present invention relates to a heat transfer fin appropriate for use in a heat exchanger for air conditioners and other types of heat exchangers.
Improvement in the heat transfer performance of an air side heat transfer fin for a heat exchanger or the like used in an air conditioner is an essential factor when miniaturizing the heat exchanger for saving energy in the system itself.
To improve the heat transfer performance, a cross fin type heat exchanger including slit fins or louver fins has been proposed. Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 4-93595 and Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 9-26279 disclose such heat exchangers. When slits or louvers are arranged for heat transfer fins made of thin plates having satisfactory heat transmittance such as aluminum plates, their front edges function to improve the heat transfer performance (heat transfer coefficient) with air.
Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 2002-195774 proposes the use of a stacked type heat exchanger including flat heat transfer tubes and corrugated fins in an air conditioner. The entire heat exchanger including the flat heat transfer tubes and the corrugated fins as well as each part of the heat exchanger is shown in
A heat exchanger 10 includes pipe-shaped upper and lower headers 12A and 12B through which a refrigerant is flows in and out. A plurality of parallel flat heat transfer tubes 1, which extend between the headers 12A and 12B in a direction orthogonal to the headers 12A and 12A, are formed in communication with the headers 12A and 12B. Corrugated fins 11, which are formed by continuously bending a flat aluminum plate or the like, is arranged between the heat transfer tubes 1 to join the adjacent heat transfer tubes 1.
As shown in
A plurality of louvers 11a and 11b for increasing the heat transfer efficiency with air are formed in the corrugated fins 11 along a plane from the upstream side to the downstream side and configured so that the front edges function to immediately improve the heat exchange performance between the refrigerant and the air.
However, improvement in the heat transfer performance has limits when just forming slits and louvers in heat transfer fins made of thin aluminum plates regardless of the form of the heat transfer fin used. Selecting the material for the heat transfer fin and improving the heat transfer performance of the heat exchanger are thus being considered.
It is an object of the present invention to provide heat transfer fins for a heat exchanger that significantly improves the heat transfer performance by forming air side heat transfer fins for a heat exchanger from a foam metal manufactured by foaming copper, aluminum, or the like, which have high heat transmittance.
The present invention is configured as below to achieve the above object.
(1) First Solution
A first solution according to the present invention is a heat transfer fin arranged on a heat transfer tube through which fluid flows for exchanging heat with air. The heat transfer fin contacts air to exchange heat. The heat transfer fin is made of foam metal having a pore density of 20 PIP or greater.
The foam metal has an open cell type porous structure with fine linear grooves continuously connected to one another enabling fluid to flow therethrough. Thus, the surface area per unit volume is large. Therefore, the heat transfer area of the foam metal is large. The heat transfer is enhanced by disturbance in the fluid since the foam metal has a complex passage.
Furthermore, since the foam metal includes linear grooves, a temperature boundary layer can be easily renewed, and a high heat transfer coefficient can be obtained. The heat transfer performance of the heat transfer fin thus becomes extremely high.
Therefore, the heat exchange performance of a heat exchanger is greatly improved when employing the heat transfer fin made of foam metal.
However, the passage configuration is complex in the foam metal and the pressure loss is large. Thus, an optimal pore density must be determined when employing foam metal as the material for the heat transfer fin. According to the results of various analyses and experiments, the more preferable pore density for maximizing the heat transfer property of the foam metal is 20 PIP or greater.
(2) Second Solution
In a second solution according to the present invention, the heat transfer tube through which fluid flows for exchanging heat with air is provided as a plurality, and the plurality of heat transfer tubes are set at an interval of 12 mm or less.
As described above, the heat transfer fin made of foam metal has a superior heat transfer performance since the surface area per unit volume is large and the heat transfer area is large. However, the fin efficiency is low compared to a louver fin or the like because the foam metal has fine linear grooves. Therefore, the interval of the plurality of heat transfer tubes must be optimized. According to the results of various analyses, the interval of the plurality of heat transfer tubes is effective when it is 12 mm or less, and the heat transfer performance is sufficiently improved especially when the pore density is 20 PIP or greater.
(3) Third Solution
In a third solution according to the present invention, a heat exchanger is a stacked type heat exchanger.
The stacked type heat exchanger is configured so that the heat transfer tube is flat and extends in the air flowing direction, and so that the heat transfer fin arranged in between is sufficiently long in the air flowing direction. Therefore, the stacked type heat exchanger itself has high heat transfer performance.
The heat transfer performance further improves when employing the heat transfer fin made of foam metal in the stacked air-heat exchanger.
According to the above structure, a heat exchanger having a high heat exchange capability and appropriate for use in an air conditioner is formed with low cost, and miniaturization of the heat exchanger is achieved.
(4) Fourth Solution
In a fourth solution according to the present invention, the pore density is 20 PIP or greater and 60 PIP or less.
In addition to the first solution, the optimal upper limit value of the bore density is obtained through various analyses and experiments.
(5) Fifth Solution
In a fifth solution according to the present invention, an interval H between the plurality of heat transfer tubes is set at 4 mm or greater and 12 mm or less.
As described above, the foam metal has superior heat transfer performance since the surface area per unit volume is large and the heat transfer area is large. However, the fin efficiency is low. Therefore, the interval for the plurality of heat transfer tubes must be optimized. From the results of various experiments, the heat transfer performance improved when the interval of the heat transfer tubes was 4 mm or greater and 12 mm or less.
In this embodiment, the heat transfer fin 13 is not the corrugated fin of the prior art and is made of foam metal of open cell type having a porous structure, as shown in
The heat transfer tube 1 has a plurality of refrigerant passage grooves with square cross-sections partitioned by partitions in the same manner as the prior art shown in
The foam metal forming the heat transfer fin 13 is a porous substance. Therefore, the foam metal has a large heat transfer area since the surface area per unit volume is large and complex passages are formed therein. Thus, effective heat transfer promotion may be expected due to the disturbance of the fluid. Since foam metal has many fine linear groves connected to each other (see structure
When the heat exchanger 10 having such a configuration is used, for example, as a condenser, the refrigerant introduced from the external refrigerant piping 7 via the upper header 12A is uniformly distributed to flowed from the upper side to the lower side of the heat transfer tube 1, and discharged from the outer refrigerant pipe 8 through the lower header 12B. If the heat exchanger 10 is used as an evaporator, the refrigerant flows in the opposite direction.
In such a stacked type heat exchanger, the heat transfer tubes 1 are flat and elongated in the air flow direction, and the heat transfer fins 13 arranged in between also extend in the air flowing direction. Thus, the heat transfer performance is large. The heat transfer fins 13 are easily formed by foaming and molding a metal having a high heat transfer coefficient, such as aluminum or copper, into a shape that can be brazed.
Therefore, the heat exchanger suitable for use in an air conditioner may be formed with a reduced size at a lower cost and with a high heat exchange performance.
The foam metal forming the heat transfer fin 13 of the present embodiment is a porous substance, in which the surface area per unit area expands as the pore density PPI becomes higher as in (A) 10 PPI, (B) 20 PPI and (C) 40 PPI shown in
Through the results of various analyses and experiments, the pore density PPI of the foam metal was found to be generally preferable at 20 PPI (
A problem in which the fin efficiency is low compared to the louver fin of the prior art arises for the heat transfer fin 13 made of foam metal since the diameter of the linear grooves connected to one another is small. Therefore, the interval (fin width) H of the heat transfer tube 1 must have an optimal value. According to the results of various analyses and experiments, the interval H of the heat transfer tube 1 was found to be optimal in the range of 4 mm or greater and 12 mm or less.
That is, according to the experiment results, the interval H of the heat transfer tube 1 is effective when it is 4 mm or greater and 12 mm or less, as described below. In particular, the heat transfer performance QN (W/m3) per unit volume with respect to the front surface wind velocity Vf greatly improves compared to that for the louver fin, as shown in the graph of
As will be described below, the dimensions 5 mm, 8 mm, 12 mm in the examples of
Several experiments were performed to check the improvement effect for the effective heat transfer performance of the heat transfer fin 13 made of foam metal.
A foam metal made of aluminum (aluminum alloy 6010) was used for the heat transfer fin as the open cell type tested foam metal. Three types of the foam metal having a pore density PPI of, for example, No. 1, 10 PPI shown in
The pressure loss and the heat transfer coefficient of the heat transfer fin for each case were experimentally obtained, and analysis was performed to clarify the basic heat transfer property and the influence of the wall surface of the heat transfer tube 1 serving as the heat source.
The experiments were conducted under the conditions of 20° C. for air temperature and 50% for relative humidity. The measurement of the pressure loss was performed in a non-load condition in which no warm water was supplied to the heat transfer tube 1, and the measurement of the heat transfer coefficient was performed by supplying warm water of 50° C. as a warm heat source. The wind velocity range was 0.5 to 2.3 m/s in terms of the wind velocity Vf at the front surface side (upstream side) of the heat transfer fin 13.
The specific material of the aluminum foam metal used in this experiment was aluminum alloy 6101, as mentioned above. The detailed specification is shown in [Table 1]. In order to check the influence of the interval H between the wall surfaces for the foam metal No. 1 to No. 3 (10, 20, 40 PPI) of the three types of pore densities described above, fins of the three widths H of 5 mm, 8 mm, and 12 mm were prepared. Thus, a total of nine types of samples were prepared. The height L of the foam metal was 89 mm, the depth D was 13 mm, and the surface area per unit volume was
1) Pressure Loss
The graph of
The pressure loss property of the foam metal is expressed as follows using the permeability (K) and the Ergun coefficient (CE).
The graph of
The friction loss coefficient f and ReK are defined as below using the obtained K.
Re
K
=ρV
f
·{square root over (K)}/μ (3)
2) Heat Transfer Coefficient
The graph of
h
a
=Q
a
·A
t
/ΔT
LMTD (4)
Qa is the heat transfer amount, At is the total heat transfer area combining the surface area of the foam metal and the area of the wall surface, and ΔTLMTD is the logarithmic mean temperature difference. Further, haβ represents the heat transfer performance per unit volume. It is apparent here that the heat transfer performance increases as the pore density PPI increases and the smaller the fin width H decreases. In particular, the heat transfer performance becomes higher than the conventional louver fin in the 20 PIP No. 2 fin sample and the 40 PIP No. 3 fin sample. This suggesting the possibility of sufficient miniaturization of the heat exchanger.
Although the above heat transfer coefficient ha includes the fin efficiency, the heat transfer coefficient ho should not include the fin efficiency for optimal designing. However, the heat transfer coefficient ho cannot be easily obtained due to the complex passage shape resulting from foam metal. Accordingly, ho is obtained through the following approximation method.
The fin efficiency of flat plates spaced from each other by dimension H is expressed with the following equation.
m=√{square root over (hoP/kA)} (6)
P is the perimeter, A is the cross-sectional area, and k is the heat conductivity. Since P/A of equation (6) is unknown for the foam metal, the value of m is assumed as in equation (7), ho is assumed as being constant due to dimension H, and the values of C are obtained for each pore density PPI (10 PPI, 20 PPI, 40 PPI) of No. 1 to No. 3 from experimental data in which the dimension H is changed. The results are shown in [Table 2].
m=√{square root over (C·ho/k)} (7)
From the above results, it is apparent that C increases as the pore density PPI increases. This is because the line diameter of line material increases as the pore density PPI increases and thereby increases P/A. The result indicating ho with respect to the front surface wind velocity Vf is the graph of
Nu
K
=h
o√{square root over (K12)}/k (8)
Re
K
=ρV
f√{square root over (K12)}/μ(9)
By organizing data based on the equations, the following correlation equation is obtained.
Nu
K
=0.116ReK
The contrast of the correlation equation of equation (10) and the actual experimental results are shown in
In this case, in the same manner as in the first test example described above, aluminum alloy 6010 was used as the foam metal forming the heat transfer fin. Three types of the foam metal having a pore density PIP of No. 1, 10 PIP; No. 2, 20 PIP; and No. 3, 40 PIP were prepared. Furthermore, three heat transfer tubes having different width dimensions (i.e., interval of heat transfer tube 1) H of 5 mm, 8 mm, and 12 mm were prepared for each of the three types of bore density PIP. For the total of nine types of samples, heat exchange was performed between the refrigerant (cold water as one example) at the heat transfer tube side 1 in the configuration of
The pressure loss and the heat transfer coefficient in this case were experimentally obtained and analyzed to clarify the basic heat transfer property and the influence of the wall surface of the heat transfer tube 1 serving as the heat source.
The experiments were conducted under the conditions of 20° C. for air temperature and 50% for relative humidity. The measurement of the pressure loss was performed in a non-load condition in which no cold water was supplied to the heat transfer tube 1, and the measurement of the heat transfer coefficient was performed by supplying cold water of 50° C. as a cold heat source. The wind velocity range was 0.5 to 2.3 m/s in terms of the wind velocity Vf at the front surface side (upstream side) of the heat transfer fin 13.
The specific material for the aluminum foam metal used in this experiment is aluminum alloy 6101, as mentioned above. In the same manner as in the first test example, in order to check the influence of the interval H between the wall surfaces for the foam metal No. 1 to No. 3 (10, 20, 40 PIP) of the three types of pore densities described above, fins of the three widths H of 5 mm, 8 mm, and 12 mm were prepared. Thus, a total of nine types of samples were prepared. The height L of the foam metal in the vertical direction was 89 mm, the depth D was 13 mm, and the surface area per unit volume was β.
1) Pressure Loss
In this case, the pressure loss ΔP under a non-load condition in which there is no flow of cold water is the same as in the first test example described above (refer to the graph of
However, when cold water flows under a non-load condition, two states must be considered, one being when the fin surface is dry and the other being when the fin surface is wet.
1-1) Pressure Loss In Dry State (State In Which Fin Surface is Dry)
First, the graph of
In this case as well, the pressure loss ΔP increases as the pore density PIP increases, that is, as the pore size dpore decreases, and the pressure loss ΔP increases as the fin width H decreases. This is because the surface area (including wall surface) per unit volume increases as the pore size dpore decreases and the fin width H decreases. It is apparent that foam metal has a high pressure loss ΔP compared to the louver fin (width H=7.9 mm, D=13.6 mm, fin pitch=1.5 mm) of the comparative example.
1-2) Pressure Loss In Wet State (State in Which Fin Surface is Wet)
The influence of the pore density PPI and the fin width H is substantially the same as the tendency in the dry state. However, the value of the pressure loss ΔP greatly increases compared to that in the dry state (see
This is because the fin efficiency decreases when the supply water temperature is high, the fin width is large, and the wind velocity is fast. Thus, the temperature of the fin surface distant from the wall surface becomes higher than the dew point temperature of the air, the moisture in air cannot condense, and the increasing rate of the pressure loss ΔP decreases. That is, moisture condensation occurs in only parts of the fin.
In the case of
However, the foam metal fin used in the present test is in an experimental level in which the fin surface is not processed. Thus, the problem of water drainage is sufficiently improved, for example, by applying a hydrophilic agent.
1-2) Heat Transfer Coefficient
In this case as well, two states of the fin surface, a dry state and a wet state, must be considered.
1-2-1) Heat Transfer Coefficient In Dry State
However, since the foam metal fin has a large surface area β per unit volume, to evaluate the heat transfer performance described above, evaluation is performed with the heat transfer performance hdryβ per unit volume.
1-2-2) Heat Transfer Coefficient In Wet State
3) Comprehensive Analysis of Pressure Loss and Heat Transfer Coefficient
As described above, the foam metal fin of the present embodiment has higher pressure loss and higher heat transfer coefficient per volume compared to the existing louver fin. However, in order to be configured as an air conditioner heat exchanger, the pressure loss and the heat transfer coefficient must be comprehensively analyzed. The pump power necessary for unit volume is expressed by the following equation.
V is the volume, and Ac is the flow cross-sectional area.
As shown in
The present embodiment relates to a serpentine heat exchanger in which a flat heat transfer tube 21 is bent into a serpentine shape as a single continuous structure.
The high heat transfer performance is also achieved in the heat exchanger of such configuration in the same manner as the heat exchanger of the first embodiment described above.
In this embodiment, a plurality of plate shaped heat transfer tubes 31 extending in the horizontal direction are connected in a stack form by left and right connecting members 22, and the heat transfer fin 13 made of foam metal is arranged between the connecting members 22 of each layer. Each heat transfer tube 31 includes refrigerant inlet and outlet holes 23. The holes 23 connected through the connecting members 22 form a refrigerant passage. The connecting members 22 are used for a structure similar to that of the first embodiment in a stacked plate type air-heat exchanger.
In such a configuration, high heat transfer performance is realized in the same manner as in the first embodiment.
The heat transfer fin of the present invention is not limited to the structure of the heat exchanger in each embodiment and may obviously be applied to a heat transfer fin for performing heat exchange with air, such as a cross fin type or the like.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2004-122141 | Apr 2004 | JP | national |
2005-053087 | Feb 2005 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP05/07383 | 4/18/2005 | WO | 00 | 10/12/2006 |