The invention pertains to a screw compressor with a rotor housing in which two screw rotors that mesh with one another with screw-shaped ribs and grooves are rotatably held with parallel axes, and with a cooling housing that surrounds the rotor housing at a distance, forming a cooling chamber together with the rotor housing, said cooling housing having an inlet opening and an outlet opening for a coolant flowing through the cooling chamber.
A screw compressor of this type is known from DE 201 10 360.5 U1 as part of a two-stage screw compressor for example.
The invention has particular advantages when applied to a screw compressor that compresses a gaseous medium such as air to very high pressures in the range of 30 to 50 bar, in particular about 40 bar, and in which the application involves the high pressure stage of a two or three stage compressor system in particular. Consequent with the compression to very high pressures is significant heating of the gaseous medium so that especially effective cooling is desired.
It is therefore an object of the invention to design a screw compressor of the type indicated that has an especially effective cooling system. Another object is to construct the screw compressor such that the emptying and filling of the cooling chamber with coolant is especially simple.
The screw compressor proposed according to the invention designed to meet this objective is indicated in claim 1. The dependent claims refer to further advantageous features of the screw compressor.
Through the invention, the coolant in the cooling chamber flows around the external surface of the rotor housing over nearly 360° of its periphery. Furthermore, the coolant sharply reverses its direction when it flows into the cooling chamber and again prior to flowing out; this redirection occurs at the separating wall that connects the rotor housing to the cooling jacket. What was discovered is that in this way, a very intensive cooling effect is accomplished, in particular near the separating wall, which acts like a cooling rib.
One embodiment of the invention is explained in more detail with the help of the drawings. Shown are:
The screw compressor shown in
The upper rotor 3 in
At the right end in
When the screw compressor shown in
Rotor housing 1 is surrounding by a cooling jacket or cooling housing 21, which is for the most part designed as one-piece together with rotor housing 1, surrounding the same at a distance. Above and below, the cooling housing 21 has large openings that are closed off using a cover plate 23 and a base plate 25 fastened with bolts. Between the rotor housing 1 and the cooling housing 21, 23, 25 is an annular cooling chamber 27 that surrounds the rotor housing 1.
The cooling housing 21 has an inlet opening 31 and an outlet opening 33 for coolant fluid, e.g. cooling water or oil. The inlet opening 31 opens up into a perpendicular entrance channel 35 that runs upward, the upper exit opening 35′ of which is situated opposite the bottom of the separating wall 29 at a distance. Prior to the outlet opening 33 is a perpendicular exit channel 37, the lower entrance opening 37′ of which is situated opposite the top of the separating wall 29 at a distance.
The black arrow in
There is a small vent opening 41 in the wall 39 that separates the exit channel 37 from the cooling chamber 1 at a height that roughly corresponds to the upper edge of the outlet opening 33. While filling the cooling chamber 27 with coolant, this vent opening 41 allows air to escape, as indicated in
A very small bleed opening 47 is placed in the wall 45 that separates the entrance channel 35 from the cooling chamber 27 at the level of the lower edge of the inlet opening 31. When the cooling fluid is emptied from the cooling chamber 27, cooling fluid can drain out (as indicated by the lower dotted arrow in
The relief chamber 51 is connected to the intake chamber 10 of the screw compressor via a connection channel 53 incorporated into the rotor housing 1 parallel to the rotor axis. The annular relief chamber 51 is thus subject to the intake pressure of the screw compressor present in the intake chamber 10. In the preferred use of the screw compressor as a high pressure stage of a multistage compressor system, the air fed to the intake chamber 10 can have already been pre-compressed by the upstream compressor stages to a pressure of between 10 and 15 bar, for example, in particular about 12 bar; this, then, is the pressure that is present in the relief chamber 51. As the compressor is operated, the high final pressure produced by the rotors, for example 40 bar, must drop to zero through the sealing arrangement 11a, 11b. It has been shown that this pressure drop is not linear, but concentrates primarily on the outer radial seal rings 11b that are a distance away from the profile section 7, 9 and therefore these seals are very heavily loaded mechanically. A defined intermediate pressure is established by the first relief chamber 51 since it is subject to the compressor inlet pressure at a defined point along the sealing arrangement; thus the pressure drop along the entire sealing arrangement 11a, 11b is smoothed out. This relieves the mechanical load on seals 11b.
A second annular relief chamber 55 is provided at the far end of the sealing arrangement 11 away from the rotor. This chamber is connected to the atmosphere in a known fashion. The purpose of this second relief chamber 55 is to maintain the oil system that lubricates the bearings 15 and the synchronization gears 17, 19 at zero pressure and to prevent bleed gas from passing through the sealing arrangement 11 through to the oil-lubrication areas.
As shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 058 698.8 | Dec 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/005557 | 6/9/2006 | WO | 00 | 5/20/2008 |