The present invention generally relates to refrigeration systems. More particularly, the invention relates to a compact refrigeration system which may be advantageous employed in a vehicle.
In some vehicles such as aircraft, refrigeration systems may be employed to perform various cooling functions. In a typical aircraft, where space is limited, it is advantageous to construct on-board refrigeration systems that occupy as little volume as possible. At the same time, it is advantageous to construct aircraft refrigeration systems with low weight and high efficiency.
It is known that incorporating an accumulator for liquid refrigerant in a system may improve its efficiency and longevity. An accumulator may preclude liquid slugging, a common problem that can damage compressors. Liquid refrigerant dilutes oil and reduces the viscosity of the oil-refrigerant mixture. Reduced viscosity tends to affect the life of compressors and may result in damage. Secondly, liquid at the compressor inlet may cause excessive pressures in fixed displacement designs.
While accumulators are desirable features for refrigeration systems, their use has heretofore added substantial volume to a refrigeration system. Typically, an effective accumulator must have a volume that is about equal to volume of an evaporator of the system.
As can be seen, there is a need for an aircraft refrigeration system in which an accumulator function may be employed and in which the accumulator function adds only minimal volume to the system.
In one aspect of the present invention, a space-saving cooling system for an aircraft comprising: an evaporator in an enclosure, the enclosure including an accumulation region capable of holding a liquid mixture of liquid refrigerant and lubricating oil; and a heat exchanger interposed between the evaporator and a compressor for heating refrigerant emerging from the evaporator so that liquid refrigerant does not reach an inlet of the compressor.
In another aspect of the present invention, an evaporator may comprise: an enclosure with an outlet; at least one refrigerant passage within the enclosure; an impingement surface within the enclosure; a vapor flow region interposed between an outlet end of the refrigerant passage and the impingement surface; a liquid accumulation region at a lower end of the impingement surface; and a metering orifice adjacent the accumulation region; the liquid accumulation region in communication with the outlet through the metering orifice; and an upper end of the impingement surface being in direct communication with the outlet.
In still another aspect of the present invention, a method for performing refrigeration cooling in a constrained space may comprise the steps of: evaporating refrigerant in an evaporator contained in an enclosure; accumulating liquid refrigerant in the same enclosure; and releasing metered quantities of the liquid refrigerant from the enclosure to a compressor at a rate that does not produce liquid slugging of a compressor.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following drawings, description and claims.
The following detailed description is of the best currently contemplated modes of carrying out the invention. The description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of illustrating the general principles of the invention, since the scope of the invention is best defined by the appended claims.
Various inventive features are described below that can each be used independently of one another or in combination with other features.
The present invention generally provides a cooling system that uses a space-saving evaporator that performs both evaporation and accumulator functions in the same enclosure.
Referring now to
A refrigerant circuit 20 may interconnect the evaporator 16 to a compressor 22 at an inlet side 22-1 through a suction line 20-1 that may pass through a heat exchanger 32. In an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the compressor 22 may be a scroll compressor. The compressor 22 may be driven by an AC motor 24 which may be provided with electrical power through a dedicated inverter 26 which may be connected to a DC bus 28 of the aircraft. The compressor 22 may be interconnected, at an outlet side 22-2, to the evaporator 16 through a condenser 30.
Referring now to
Referring now to
The evaporator 16 may comprise the enclosure 16-3, refrigerant passages 16-4 and cooling fluid passages 16-5. The passages 16-4 may be used to convey refrigerant 38 through the evaporator 16 as the refrigerant changes state from liquid to vapor. When installed in an operational mode the refrigerant passages 16-4 may be oriented orthogonally to a direction of gravity. The enclosure 16-3 may be provided with an end cap 16-3-1. An outlet tube 16-6 may be attached to the end cap 16-3-1.
In
The evaporator 16 may be provided with a baffle 16-7 that may extend from a bottom 16-3-2 of the enclosure 16-3 and may positioned orthogonally to the refrigerant passages 16-4. As the refrigerant 38 impinges against the baffle 16-7, refrigerant vapor 50 may pass over a top 16-7-3 of the baffle 16-7 and then into a vapor flow region 16-8. The refrigerant vapor 50 may then flow into the outlet tube 16-6. A mixture of lubricating oil 40-1 and liquid refrigerant 40-2, indicated collectively by the numeral 40, may impinge against an impingement surface 16-7-4 of the baffle 16-7 and then flow downwardly to a liquid accumulation region 16-9 at a bottom 16-7-4-1 of the impingement surface 16-7-4. The baffle 16-7 may be provided with an orifice 16-7-1 through which the liquid 40 may flow.
It may be seen that the liquid 40 may accumulate in the liquid accumulation region 16-9 whenever there may be fluid 40 emerging from the refrigerant passages 16-4 at a rate higher than a flow rate through the orifice 16-7-1. Accumulated fluid 40 may be released through the orifice 16-7-1 at a controlled or metered rate, which rate may be a function of the diameter of the orifice. This may be particularly advantageous during certain transient operational modes of the cooling system 10. For example, during start-up, a significant portion of the refrigerant 38 may emerge from the refrigerant passages 16-4 as liquid refrigerant 40-2. In such a case, the baffle 16-7 may preclude rapid entry of the refrigerant liquid 40-2 into the compressor 22. During steady-state operation of the system 10, most of the refrigerant 38 may emerge from the refrigerant passages 16-4 as vapor 50. Under these steady-state operating conditions, most of the liquid 40 emerging from the refrigerant passages may be lubricating oil 40-1. The orifice 16-7-1 may be sized to allow fluid flow at a rate about equivalent to a rate at which the lubricating oil 40-1 emerges from the refrigerant passages 16-4 under steady-state operating conditions. Any liquid refrigerant 40-2 that may be accumulated in the liquid accumulation region 16-9 may be comingled with lubricating oil 40-1. The liquid 40 may be metered out through the orifice 16-7-1 at a rate that may allow for subsequent evaporation of the liquid refrigerant 40-2 in the suction line 20-1 of the compressor 22. Thus the compressor 22 may be provided with a proper amount of lubricating while not suffering from liquid slugging.
Referring now to
The evaporator 160 may comprise an enclosure 160-3, refrigerant passages 160-4 and cooling fluid passages 160-5. When installed in an operational mode the refrigerant passages 160-4 may be oriented orthogonally to a direction of gravity. The enclosure 160-3 may be provided with an end cap 160-3-1. An outlet tube 160-6 may be attached to the end cap 160-3-1.
In
It may be seen that the liquid 40 may accumulate in the liquid accumulation region 160-9 whenever there may be fluid 40 emerging from the refrigerant passage 160-4 at a rate higher than a flow rate through the orifice 160-8. Accumulated fluid 40 may be released through the orifice 160-7-1 at a controlled or metered rate, which rate may be a function of the diameter of the orifice. This may be particularly advantageous during certain transient operational modes of the cooling system 10. For example, during start-up, a significant portion of the refrigerant flow through the evaporator 160 may emerge as liquid refrigerant 40-2. In such a case, the end cap 160-3-1 may preclude rapid entry of liquid refrigerant 40-2 into the compressor 22. During steady-state operation of the system 10, most of the refrigerant 38 may emerge from the refrigerant passages 160-4 as vapor 50. Under these steady-state operating conditions, most of the liquid 40 emerging from the refrigerant passages may be lubricating oil 40-1. The orifice 160-8 may be sized to allow fluid flow at a rate about equivalent to a rate at which the lubricating oil 40-1 may emerge from the refrigerant passages 160-4 under steady-state operating conditions. Any liquid refrigerant 40-2 that may be accumulated in the liquid accumulation region 160-9 may be comingled with lubricating oil 40-1. The liquid 40 may be metered out through the orifice 160-8 at a rate that may allow for subsequent evaporation of liquid refrigerant 40-2 in the suction line 20-1. Thus, the compressor 22 may be provided with a proper amount of lubrication while not suffering from liquid slugging.
Referring now to
It should be understood, of course, that the foregoing relates to exemplary embodiments of the invention and that modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.
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