The common way of heat transfer to higher temperature, as in cooling—refrigeration applications, is by using the steam expansion—compression cycle. The refrigerant vaporizes at pressure p2 absorbing heat from its environment (a low temperature heat source), is compressed to a higher pressure p1, condensed rejecting heat at higher temperature T1 (high temperature heat source) and expands at the initial pressure p2.
The refrigerant is a pure substance. The vaporization and condensation temperature of a pure substance are the same. The higher the pressure the higher the vaporization temperature. Steam compression reflects the electric energy consumption of the cycle.
There is also an application where heat compression is applied. Now heat is consumed for working fluid compression. The solution is partially vaporized at high temperature.
The steam performs a cooling cycle while the solution expands and returns to absorber where the steam is absorbed (condensed) at low temperature. The initial solution has been reformed, compressed and driven to evaporator. The application is called absorption or heat compression heat pump. The working fluid is a solution instead of a pure substance. The most common solutions are NH3—H2O and LiBr—H2O. The vapor pressure of a solution is a function of temperature and concentration as well. Ideal solutions follow the Raoult low P=xP0, where P0 the vaporization pressure of the pure substance at a given temperature and x the concentration. Real solutions divers from this low and P=αP0=γmP0, with a the activity, γ the activity coefficient being a function of concentration and m the mole concentration. It means that at a given temperature the solution may vaporize at different pressure depending on the concentration. The steam is absorbed by the solution and thus condenses. In the followings the term steam absorption or condensation is used. The compression ratio is DP=p1/p2 =α1p01/α2p02=(α1/α2)(p01/p02). The ratio α1/α2 is unit in the usual absorption cycle as the solution has the same concentration during vaporization and condensation.
In the present method this ratio is less than ⅕. In an extreme case this ratio may equals 1/(p01/p02) and DP=1. It means that for the same temperature lift the compression ratio and consequently the required work will be less by a proportional ratio. Activity decreases as the electrolyte concentration increases. In our cooling application we prefer solutions with negative deviation from Raoults low, it is the vapor pressure is lower than that of the ideal solution. Exothermic heat of reaction is also preferred. There are many solvent—solute combinations that may be used. In the following description we refer to the solute as electrolyte and especially as a solid electrolyte. Electrolyte solutions seem to be the most convenient while other kind of solutes can also be used. There are two pressure levels in absorption cycle as in the mechanical (electrical) compression cycle. The advantage of the first is that liquid compression spends much lesser electric energy than vapor compression and heat is cheaper than electricity. In our method there is no considerable heat consumption too.
Heat is absorbed by the evaporator to produce steam and rejected by the absorber where steam is absorbed (condensed). The temperature rise depends on pressure ratio ΔP.
Cooling efficiency COP of the absorption cycle is the evaporation heat of the pure solvent divided by that of the solution. The last is higher than the first and usually COP=0.7.
In the present method of working fluid compression for heat transfer, the evaporating and condensing solutions differ as much as possible in (electrolyte) concentration, with condensation taking place in the most concentrated (higher concentration) solution so that a lower ΔP is achieved for the same temperature levels. The partial solution evaporation takes place at lower temperature than the condensation in reveres to classical absorption cycle. We name the high solute concentration solution as rich solution and the low electrolyte concentration, poor solution. The solution concentration change is achieved by solution temperature change. The solubility of many electrolytes is reduced by decreasing temperature. As an example, RbNO3 (M=1,3−30) for t=0 to 100° C., KBr (M=4−12) for t=0 to 160° C., TINO3 (M=1−15) for t=0 to 100° C. We select such an electrolyte for the description that follows. The term concentrated solution refers to the maximum concentration at a given temperature. The solute may be any substance dissolved in the solvent. The most convenient solutes for the application are the electrolytes. For this reason the term electrolyte is used to the followings instead of solute. A high concentration, concentrated (saturated) solution (rich) is cooled from a high temperature to a lower (environment) temperature. During this process an amount of the dissolved substance (electrolyte) forms a different phase like sediment (crystals) and is separated from the solution by any of the known methods. The remaining liquid solution has lower electrolyte concentration (poor solution). (If a solution which solubility decreases increasing temperature is used, the solution is heated from the low temperature to separate the electrolyte. The poor solution is at highest temperature). Its pressure is regulated (expanded) so as to vaporize at the desired temperature for a given concentration. In this way the poor solution is partially evaporated in evaporator (E) absorbing heat from its environment (low temperature heat sink) and causing refrigeration. Steam is compressed and driven to a heat exchanger, the absorber (A) where the separated electrolyte and the remaining poor solution of the evaporator also enter after having been compressed. The initial rich (higher concentration) solution has been reformed. Condensation takes place by rejecting heat from the absorber at high temperature. The steam may be absorbed by part of the separated phase at high temperature and the result enters a condenser with the poor solution from the evaporator and the rest of separated phase to reform the initial solution which will be cooled again. All of the streams have come to the same pressure before joining each other. In case of using an electrolyte having endothermic solution, part of the separated electrolyte is being driven to the remaining poor solution moving from the evaporator to absorber.
Separation and dissolution of different phase into the temperature changing solution may take place at the same equipment. Crystals remain on the equipment in one stream (cooled stream) and dissolved as the other stream (heated stream) passes from the same surface. The required dissolution heat is recovered through a heat exchanger from the solution that is cooled going the opposite way. Heat exchange takes place between heating and cooling solutions to recover heat.
More than one cycles can be combined for higher temperature lift. The evaporator of the second cycle, which works at higher temperatures than the first, recovers heat from the absorber of the first.
In any case the being cooled solution, may be cooled at below environment temperature. The partial evaporation there takes heat from the solution and cools it at the lower temperature. In this way its temperature and consequently the concentration is further reduced. The resulting electrolyte joins the rest separated amount and the steam is driven to the being cooled solution or to separated electrolyte. The remaining solution is compressed and evaporated at the desired temperature as before.
The method is presented in
Input energy Qin=heat of solvent vaporization qL+electrolyte crystallization heat qk+electric energy for steam compression wel.
Output energy Qout=solvent (steam) condensation heat qL+electrolyte dissolution heat qk1 in (A1) by steam+dissolution in poor solution qk2, Qout=−(qL+qk).
The result is heat transfer from low temperature TE (environment temperature or lower in refrigeration applications) to a higher temperature TA almost without heat consumption. Depending on the solution used and the specific application a small amount of electric energy is consumed. This amount is a few times less than that required by a conventional compression cycle. If steam is absorbed only by separated phase in a secondary absorber and the result joins the poor solution in (A1), the condensation temperature may be very high as the solution formed in secondary absorber has a very high concentration.
In any cycle form, if an electrolyte with endothermic heat of solution is used, part of the separated electrolyte from (K1) is dissolved in the solution moving from (E) to (A) recovering heat from the solution moving the opposite way.
In order to achieve higher temperature lift two similar cycles may be combined. The evaporator of the second cycle recovers heat from the absorber of the first. Suppose the first cycle works between 0° C. and 120° C. and the second between 120° C. and 250° C.
A lift from 0° C. to 250° C. has been achieved. The rich solution of the second cycle may be cooled below its evaporator temperature as this temperature is higher than the environment temperature. As an example one of the referred electrolytes may be used for the first cycle and PbNO3 for the second (M=3.8 at 100° C. and 8 at 200° C.).
An alternative of the above cycle is presented in
The additional solute joins (K1). Alternatively the evaporator (E) can be used as an auxiliary evaporator. The produced steam is condensed and enters the main evaporator at the lower refrigeration temperature together with the remaining from (E) solution.
Here the solution is vaporized to cause the refrigeration. Steam and remaining solution move to the absorber as before. The main evaporator has a solution that is not concentrated. The poor solution can split into two flows. The first enters directly to main evaporator and the second is driven to the auxiliary evaporator.
Another alternative is presented in
Turbines (TU1) and (TU2) are used to control the condensation (heating) and evaporation (refrigeration) temperature of (CON) and (EV). These turbines may be connected so that the work of the first is used by the second. In this cycle compression is achived through (E), (A) and (K). The compression ratio is α1/α2=αE/αA.
Additional mechanical steam compression may be applied also.
Energy balance gives that the consumed energy is recovered by rejected energy.
Solution evaporation heat is recovered by solution condensation heat, solvent evaporation is performed by exploiting environmental heat and crystallization by dissolution heat. Steam compression is achieved by a crystallization—dissolution cycle which spends no heat (theoretically).
A double or multi stage cycle may be applied here too. In each cycle, a pressure difference between evaporator—absorber is created by the above method. Each cycle works in different pressure levels. Different or the same solutes and the same solvent are used in each cycle. The evaporator pressure of the second cycle is close (preferably equal) to the absorber pressure of the first and the absorber pressure of the second close (preferably equal) to evaporator pressure of the first. The steam of the second cycle evaporator performs the refrigeration cycle described above (condensed—expands—evaporates) and enters the absorber of the first cycle. The steam of the first cycle evaporator enters the absorber of the second. Now higher thermal compression has been achieved. Condensation heat is also recovered by evaporation heat. The cycles do not necessarily work at the same temperatures. Additional mechanical compression may be applied to steam in order to enter the absorber. Suppose the absorber of the first cycle works at 0.1 bar, the evaporator at 1 bar and the absorber of the second at 1 bar and its evaporator at 10 bar. The steam of the second evaporator is at 10 bar and expands to 0.1 bar. The steam of the first evaporator is at 1 bar and enters the second absorber at the same pressure of 1 bar. The after all compression ratio is 10/0.1=100.
Equipments (A) and (E) may be the same equipment. The flow to be evaporated and the flow to be condensed may pass through the same heat exchanger. The application may be applied for work production. The steam from the evaporator is expanded through a steam turbine to produce work instead of performing the refrigeration cycle.
As the expansion ratio is low for power production, steam may be absorbed by the separated electrolyte at low temperature. The resulting substance is driving to an equipment (A), where the remaining poor solution from the evaporator enters too to form the initial rich solution. In this case heat is consumed to evaporate the solution since the absorption heat is rejected at lower temperature. Electrolytes which crystals are connected with solvent molecules at low temperature but not at higher temprature, are preferred here. The advantage is that the expansion ratio is higher than that of the known power cycle at the same temperature.
Many solvents like H2O, methanol, formamide, formic acid, acetonitrile, DMF, DMSO can be combined with many electrolytes like ZnCl2, SbCl2, SbF2, CoI2, TICl, (Li,Na,K,NH4 etc) with (Cl,Br,I,SO4 . . . ),Pb(NO3)2, TI(NO3), RbNO3.
Solutes which concentration decreases increasing temperature may be used. KBr—NH3 is an example. The high concentration solution is at low temperature and the concentration decreases as the solution is heated. Solute is separated again. The high temperature solution is vaporized. The steam performs the known condensation—expansion—vaporization cycle and enters absorber. The remaining solution returns to absorber recovering heat from the solution moving the opposite direction. The separated solute enters absorber too, forming the initial solution. Now vaporization heat is required. Alternatively the steam may be absorbed by the separated solute and then enter absorber. The solute may be NH3, Freon or other non electrolytes. The same may be used for work production. The steam is expanded through a turbine instead of performing the cooling cycle.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20120100123 | Mar 2012 | GR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GR2013/000012 | 3/1/2013 | WO | 00 |