The present invention relates to a humidifying heat exchanger for a fuel cell, and more particularly, to a humidifying heat exchanger for a fuel cell, which is not easily broken even though a tube is expanded due to overheat and also is capable of improving heat-exchange efficiency.
Fuel cells are units for directly converting chemical energy stored in hydrocarbon fuel into electric energy through an electrochemical reaction. That is, fuel cells are units for directly converting chemical energy into electric energy through a hydrogen oxidation reaction in an anode and an oxidation reduction reaction in a cathode. A fuel cell system for producing electricity through above-described reactions may include a fuel cell stack, a mechanical balance of plant (MBOP), and an electrical balance of plant (EBOP). The fuel cell stack may be a unit for producing electricity through the electrochemical reaction, the MBOP may be a unit for supplying oxygen and hydrogen into the fuel cell stack, and the EBOP may be a unit for converting a DC power applied into the fuel cell stack into an AC power through an inverter to supply the converted AC power to desired units.
However, hydrogen has to be supplied to the anode of the fuel cell stack to perform the oxidation reaction on the anode. In a high-temperature fuel cell such as a molten carbonate fuel cell (MCFC) reforms hydrocarbon contained in the fuel (for example, liquefied natural gas (LNG)) for the fuel cell into hydrogen by using a reformer to supply hydrogen into the anode. Here, a reforming reaction occurring in the reformer requires water. However, since liquid water may damage the reforming catalyst, gaseous water together with the fuel for the fuel cell has to be supplied into the reformer. When the gaseous water is supplied into the reformer, the fuel for the fuel cell may be easily mixed with the water. Thus, the high-temperature fuel cell such as the MCFC includes a humidifying heat exchanger for evaporating the water to mix the evaporated water with the fuel for the fuel cell, thereby supplying the gaseous water.
A fixed tube sheet heat exchanger of a multi-tubular heat exchanger humidifying heat exchanger is used as the humidifying heat exchanger. The fixed tube sheet heat exchanger includes tube sheets 12 on both ends in a longitudinal direction thereof and a tube 14 fixed between the tube sheets 12 as illustrated in
In detail, since the tube 14 is overheated during heat exchange, the tube 14 is expanded in an axis direction (in a longitudinal direction of the tube 14). However, since the tube 14 is coupled to the tube sheets 12 at both ends thereof in the longitudinal direction, the expansion of the tube 14 is restrained by the tube sheets 12. Thus, stress may be concentrated into the coupled portion between the tube sheets 12 and the tube 14 due to the restraint in expansion of the tube 14. Therefore, the fixed tube sheet heat exchanger according to the related art may be easily broken (or deformed) at the coupled portion between the tube sheets 12 and the tube 14.
Therefore, to solve the foregoing limitation, the present invention provides a humidifying heat exchanger for a fuel cell, which is not easily broken even though a tube is expanded due to overheat and also is capable of improving heat-exchange efficiency.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a humidifying heat exchanger for a fuel cell, including: a body comprising a gas inflow hole defined in one end thereof and a gas discharge hole defined in the other end thereof in a longitudinal direction; a first tube disposed within the body, the first tube being spirally wound along the longitudinal direction of the body; a second tube disposed within the body and spirally wound along the longitudinal direction of the body, the second tube being disposed outside the first tube to surround the first tube; a supply unit disposed at a side of the gas discharge hole to supply a mixture of a fuel and water into the first and second tubes; and a discharge unit disposed at a side of the gas inflow hole to discharge the mixture supplied from the first and second tubes.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a humidifying heat exchanger for a fuel cell, including: a body comprising a gas inflow hole defined in one end thereof and a gas discharge hole defined in the other end thereof in a longitudinal direction; a first tube disposed in the body, the first tube being spirally wound along the longitudinal direction of the body; a flow diffusion unit passing through a center of the first tube and extending along the longitudinal direction of the body; a supply unit disposed at a side of the gas discharge hole to supply a mixture of a fuel and water into the first tube; and a discharge unit disposed at a side of the gas inflow hole to discharge the mixture from the first tube.
In the humidifying heat exchanger for the fuel cell according to the embodiment of the present invention, since the tubes within the humidifying heat exchanger are wound along the longitudinal direction of the body, the tubes may absorb the expansion even though the tubes are expanded due to the overheat, thereby preventing the tubes from being broken. Also, since one tube surrounds the other tube, or the flow diffusion unit passing through the center of the tube diffuses the high-temperature gas to the outside, the body increases in heat-exchange area, thereby improving the heat exchange efficiency.
Hereinafter, preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described below in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. However, the present invention is not limited thereto.
High-temperature gas introduced into the gas inflow hole 112 heats a mixture in a first tube 120 that will be described later (also, as described below, if a second tube is further provided, the high-temperature gas heats a mixture in the second tube). In other words, the high-temperature gas introduced into the gas inflow hole 112 and discharged to the gas discharge hole 114 is heat-exchanged with the mixture in the first tube 120, and thus the mixture in the first tube 120 increases in temperature due to the heat-exchange. In this process, liquid water in the mixture is evaporated into gaseous water, and a fuel in the mixture is heated to an appropriate temperature. As described above, the high-temperature gas heating the mixture (or mixtures in the first and the second tubes) in the first tube 120 may be a cathode exhaust gas exhausted from a cathode of a fuel cell stack.
For reference, the gas inflow hole 112 and the gas discharge hole 114 may be defined in both ends of the body 110, respectively, as illustrated in
The first tube 120 through which a mixture of a fuel and water flows may be disposed within the body 110. The first tube 120 is spirally wound along the longitudinal direction of the body 110 as illustrated in
For example, the tube 120 according to the current embodiment may easily absorb the expansion thereof due to the shape similar to a spring even though the tube 120 is pushed inward (that is, the tube 120 is pushed inward from an upper end or lower end of
Alternatively, two tubes may be provided. That is, the humidifying heat exchanger according to the current embodiment may further include the second tube 130 spirally wound along the longitudinal direction of the body 110 to surround the first tube 120 at the outside of the first tube 120. As described above, when one tube 130 surrounds the other tube 120, the heat exchange is more efficiently performed. In detail, the body 110 forming the shell of the humidifying heat exchanger has a general cylindrical shape. Thus, when the two tubes are spirally wound within the body 110 having the cylindrical shape, heat exchange is efficiently performed because a heat transfer area increases when compared to the case in which only one tube is provided. That is, the humidifying heat exchanger according to the current embodiment has a structure in which one tube 130 surrounds the other tube 120 to increase the heat transfer area, thereby increasing heat-exchange efficiency.
Here, the first tube 120 and the second tube 130 may be wound in directions opposite to each other as illustrated in
Therefore, the humidifying heat-exchanger may allow the high-temperature gas to flow irregularly (for example, a turbulent flow) to improve heat-exchange efficiency. The first tube 120 and the second tube 130 may be wound in the directions opposite to each other so as to allow the high-temperature gas to flow irregularly. When the first tube 120 and the second tube 130 are wound in the directions opposite to each other, the high-temperature gas may more irregularly flow because a flow of the gas is more restricted when compared to a case in which the first and second tubes 120 and 130 are wound in the same direction.
Since the humidifying heat exchanger according to the current embodiment has the two tubes 120 and 130 wound in directions opposite to each other, the gas introduced into the gas inflow hole 112 may flow irregularly to contact the tubes 120 and 130 with a larger area, thereby improving heat-exchange efficiency.
Also, the humidifying heat exchanger according to the current embodiment includes a supply unit 140 for supplying the mixture of the fuel and the water to the first and second tubes 120 and 130. The supply unit 140 includes a fuel supply part 142 through which the fuel is supplied, a water supply part 144 through which the water is supplied, and a mixing part 146 in which the fuel supplied from the fuel supply part 142 and the water supplied from the water supply part 144 is mixed. The mixing part 146 may be sufficient to have a hollow space therein so that the fuel and the water are mixed therein. For example, even if the mixing part 146 has a structure where a tube in which the fuel flows is simply connected to a tube in which the water flows, a portion where the tube in which the fuel flows is in contact with the tube in which the water flows may be a kind of mixing part.
The first and second tubes 120 and 130 are connected to the mixing part 146. The first and second tubes 120 and 130 may be directly connected to the mixing part 146 or be indirectly connected to the mixing part 146 through the other tube. Thus, the fuel supplied from the fuel supply part 142 and the water supplied from the water supply part 144 may be mixed in the mixing part 146 and then supplied to the first and second tubes 120 and 130.
The mixture of the fuel and the water supplied from the supply unit 140 to the tubes 120 and 130 is heat-exchanged with the high-temperature gas within the body 110 and then discharged to the outside of the body 110 through a discharge unit 150. The discharge unit 150 includes a collection tube 152 and a discharge tube 154. The collection tube 152 is a tube to which the mixtures from the first and second tubes 120 and 130 are collected, and the discharge tube 154 is a tube connected to the collection tube 152 to discharge the mixtures collected in the collection tube 152 to the outside of the body 110. However, the collection tube 152 may be sufficient to have an empty space therein, like the above-described mixing part 146 so that the mixtures from the first and second tubes 120 and 130 are received in the empty space. For example, even if the collection tube 152 has a structure in which the first and second tubes are simply connected to the discharge tube, a portion where the discharge tube is in contact with the first and second tubes may be a kind of collection tube.
The supply unit 140 and the discharge unit 150 may be disposed on sides opposite to the gas inflow hole 112 and the gas discharge hole 114, respectively. That is, the supply 140 is disposed at a side of the gas discharge hole 114, and the discharge unit 150 is disposed at a side of the gas inflow hole 112 in the current embodiment, as illustrated in
The first tube 120 is coupled to the body 110 at a side of the supply unit 140, and the second tube 130 is coupled to collection tube 152 at a side of the discharge unit 150, as illustrated in
However, when the coupled portions are disposed on both ends in the longitudinal direction as described in the current embodiment, a tube having a spring shape may absorb the expansion before the stress is concentrated to the coupled portions. That is, since the tube having a spring shape is disposed between the coupled portions to absorb most of the expansion due to the overheat, the stress applied to the coupled portions may be slight. Therefore, as described in the current embodiment, when the tubes are coupled to the body 110 at the side of the supply unit 140 and to the collection tube 152 at the side of the discharge unit 150, the tubes may not be merely broken due to overheat.
The humidifying heat exchanger according to the current embodiment includes a flow diffusion unit 160 passing through the center of the first tube 120 and extending along the longitudinal direction of the body 110. As described above, the humidifying heat exchanger according to the current embodiment may further include the second tube 130 outside the first tube 120 so as to sufficiently secure the heat transfer area. However, even though the second tube 130 is further provided in the humidifying heat exchanger, it may be difficult to prevent heat losses due to the high-temperature gas that passes through the center of the first tube 120 from occurring. The humidifying heat exchanger according to the current embodiment is provided with the flow diffusion unit 160 at the center of the first tube 120 to prevent the heat losses from occurring. When the flow diffusion unit 160 is provided, the more amount of high-temperature gas may contact the tubes 120 and 130 because the high-temperature gas does not pass through the center of the first tube 120, that is, the high-temperature gas is diffused to the outside by the flow diffusion unit 160.
Here, the flow diffusion unit 160 has to be lightweight as much as possible. This is done because the heavier flow diffusion unit 160 makes its installation and maintenance more difficult. The flow diffusion unit 160 may have an empty cylindrical shape to reduce a weight thereof in the current embodiment. However, when the flow diffusion unit 160 having the foregoing shape is provided, air within the flow diffusion unit 160 may be expanded due to the high-temperature gas, resulting in breaking of the flow diffusion unit 160. Thus, a discharge hole (not shown) may be defined in the flow diffusion unit 160 according to the current embodiment to prevent the flow diffusion unit 160 from being broken. When the discharge hole is defined in the flow diffusion unit 160, the air within the flow diffusion unit 160 may be discharged to the outside to prevent the flow diffusion unit 160 from being broken due to the expansion.
The discharge hole may be defined in an end of the flow diffusion unit 160 at a side of the gas discharge hole 114 (an upper portion of the flow diffusion unit 160 with respect to the
The present invention relates to a humidity heat exchanger for a fuel cell, which is not easily broken even though a tube is expanded due to overheat and also is capable of improving heat-exchange efficiency.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2011-0141354 | Dec 2011 | KR | national |
10-2012-0050955 | May 2012 | KR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/KR2012/011215 | 12/21/2012 | WO | 00 | 6/23/2014 |