Claims
- 1. A condenser tube assembly, comprising a plurality of spaced substantially vertical, parallel tube sections, each tube section including a pair of plates connected together along their outer periphery and along spaced horizontal bands within said periphery, facing portions of said plates intermediate said bands being expanded to form parallel tube portions, and connecting portions at alternate ends of said tube portions connecting said tubes in serpentine fashion to provide a unitary tube, the opposite ends of said tubes having free end portions for connection to a source of fluid to be condensed and for discharge of the condensed fluid, respectively, each of said tubes having upper and lower concave facing portions connected by facing portions spaced relatively closer together, said sections being arranged side by side so that the spaced connected horizontal bands of alternate sections are substantially directly opposite in a horizontal plane to the facing portions spaced relatively closer together of each of said tubes, means for introducing a liquid coolant onto the upper portions of said condenser assembly so that said coolant flows down each tube section by gravity in heat exchange relationship with the fluid to be condensed, and means for introducing a flow of air into said condenser assembly and causing said air to flow upwardly between said tube sections and impinge upon said facing portions.
- 2. A condenser tube assembly, comprising a plurality of spaced substantially vertical, parallel sections, each section including parallel horizontal tubes connected in spaced relation and in serpentine fashion, continuous plate means connecting the tubes, the upper and lower tubes having free end portions for connection to a source of fluid to be condensed and for discharge of the condensed fluid, respectively, each of said tubes having upper and lower concave facing portions connected by facing portions spaced relatively closer together, and said sections being arranged side by side so that the plate means between the parallel tubes of alternate sections are substantially directly opposite in a horizontal plane to the facing portions spaced relatively closer together of each of said tubes, means for introducing a liquid coolant onto said tube assembly and causing said coolant to flow in heat exchange relationship with said tubes and the fluid to be condensed, and means for introducing a flow of air onto said condenser assembly and causing said air to flow upwardly in intimate engagement with said tubes and the liquid coolant.
- 3. The invention of claim 2 in which each section comprises a pair of sheets of deformable material, each of said sheets having an elongated imperforate channel arranged in a serpentine path with opposite ends of said channel extending adjacent to the edge of said sheet substantially the entire length of each channel, including a pair of spaced first portions remote from the plane of said sheet and an intermediate second portion connecting said first portions and being located closer to the plane of said sheet than said first portions, said channel of one sheet extending outwardly from the plane of the sheet in a direction opposite the channel of the other sheet, and means for attaching said sheets together in facing relationship so that said channels cooperate with each other to form elongated tubes through which fluid may pass freely.
- 4. The invention of claim 2 in which the distance between each of the upper and lower concave facing portions is approximately 50% to 70% of the height of each tube, in which the height of the plate means between contiguous parallel tubes is approximately 25% of the vertical distance between the centers of the tubes and in which the distance between adjacent sections transverse to the direction of airflow is approximately 95% to 105% of the maximum width of the concave facing portions of each tube.
- 5. The invention of claim 6, and blower means of a size capable of causing the air to blow upwardly between said sections at a velocity averaging from 1,750 feet (533 meters) to 2,400 feet (732 meters) per minute.
- 6. An evaporative counterflow heat exchanger comprising a conduit of generally uniform cross section extending in a vertical direction, a coil assembly positioned inside said conduit, said coil assembly comprising inlet and outlet means and a plurality of tubes connected between the inlet and outlet means with different segments of the tubes extending generally horizontally across the conduit in equally spaced relation to each other at different levels in the conduit, the vertically arranged segments of the tubes being continuously connected by imperforate plate means, said sections being arranged side by side so that the plate means between the parallel tubes of alternate sections are substantially directly opposite in a horizontal plane to the tubes in the adjacent section, the tubes in each section having upper and lower concave portions connected by portions of reduced width, liquid distribution means arranged in said conduit above said coil assembly to distribute liquid down through said conduit and over said coil assembly, fan means arranged to move gas upward through said conduit between said tube segments in counterflow relationship to said liquid, the arrangement, size, spacing, and configuration of the tubes and plate means permitting the use of air velocity with turbulence and with a minimum of water entrainment in the leaving gas stream.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser No. 06/308,976, filed Oct. 6, 1981 and now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (17)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
580387 |
Jul 1959 |
CAX |
807796 |
Jan 1937 |
FRX |
59703 |
Aug 1938 |
NOX |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
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Parent |
308967 |
Oct 1981 |
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