This application claims priority to Canadian Application No. 2,383,649 filed Apr. 24, 2002.
This invention relates to heat exchangers of the type formed from dish-shaped heat exchanger plates.
One form of plate-type heat exchangers includes a plurality of plates secured together in a stacked assembly with gaskets or bosses located between adjacent plates and traversing a course adjacent to the plate peripheries. Flow of two fluids involved in heat exchange is through alternate layers defined by the stacked plates. The stacked plates are typically joined together as a unitary structure by brazing the various components together. Examples of such plate-type heat exchangers are disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,931,219 issued to Kull et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 4,872,578 issued to Fuerschbach et al.
A characteristic of previously proposed nested-dish heat exchangers is that in order to provide strength to the heat exchanger stack, the heat exchanger plates are typically sandwiched between a pair of thicker end plates. One of the end plates is typically nested within the flange of the final plate in the stack of the heat exchanger plates with the peripheral flange of the final heat exchanger plate extending a substantial distance beyond an outer surface of such end plate. Such a configuration can result in wasted space, namely, the area surrounded by the portion of the peripheral flange on the final heat exchanger plate that extends beyond the outer surface of the end plate. Additionally, the extending flange edge can provide a sharp edge such that care must be used in handling the heat exchanger to avoid injury to the person handling the heat exchanger. Accordingly, there is a need for a nested dish plate-type heat exchanger that reduces unused space. A plate-type heat exchanger which reduces the exposed peripheral flange of the final heat exchanger plate in the stack of plates is also desired.
In the present invention, an dish-type end plate configuration is used so that a fluid flow channel can be located between the end plate and the final heat-exchanger plate in the stack of heat exchanger plates, thereby reducing unused space in the stack and reducing the extent to which the flange on the final nested dish heat exchanger plate is exposed.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a heat exchanger including a first plate having a central planer portion and a peripheral flange projecting therefrom, a second plate having a central planar portion and a peripheral flange projecting therefrom, and a reinforcing plate secured to substantially an entire inner surface of the central planar portion of the second plate, an inner surface of the central planar portion of the first plate spaced apart from and opposing the reinforcing plate and the peripheral flange of the second plate projecting in an opposite direction than the peripheral flange of the first plate and having an outer surface that overlaps with an inner surface of the peripheral flange of the first plate, the overlapping surfaces being sealably joined together, a fluid flow channel having a flow inlet and a flow outlet being defined by the first and second plates and reinforcing plate.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a stacked plate-type heat exchanger including a plurality of dish-shaped heat exchanger plates arranged one next to the other to form a nested heat exchanger plate stack, each of the heat exchanger plates having a planar central portion with a peripheral flange projecting therefrom, a plurality of first and second fluid flow channels formed between the heat exchanger plates for first and second fluids respectively. The heat exchanger has first fluid and second fluid chambers formed in the stack in communication with the first and second fluid channels respectively, and includes an end plate with an end plate central planar portion and a peripheral flange projecting from the end plate central planar portion, the peripheral flange of the end plate projecting in an opposite direction and sealably nested within the peripheral flange of a final heat exchanger plate in the plate stack. A planar reinforcing plate is secured to an inner surface of end plate central planar portion between the end plate central planar portion and the final heat exchanger plate, a further fluid channel for one of the first and second fluids being located between the planar reinforcing plate and the final heat exchanger plate.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a stacked plate-type heat exchanger including a plurality of heat exchanger plates sealably secured together to form a stack, each of the heat exchanger plates having a planar central portion and inlet and outlet passages for fluid passage, a plurality of fluid channels being defined between the planar central portions, some of the fluid channels being channels for a first fluid and some of the fluid channels being channels for a second fluid to facilitate heat exchange between the first and second fluids, at least a final heat exchanger plate in the stack having a peripheral flange projecting from the planar central portion thereof. The heat exchanger has an end plate having an end plate central planar portion and a peripheral flange projecting from the end plate central planar portion, the peripheral flange of the end plate projecting in an opposite direction and sealably located within and secured to the peripheral flange of the final heat exchanger plate, a further fluid channel for one of the first and second fluids being located between the end plate and the final heat exchanger plate.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, throughout which like numerals are used to refer to like components.
Referring firstly to
In one preferred embodiment, the plates 12-20 are each formed from braze clad aluminum or aluminum alloy, however, other materials such as stainless steel or copper alloy, for example, could also be used. With reference to
With reference to
The flange 34 defines an angle of slightly greater than 90° with respect to the planar central portion 32. First and second flow openings 36 and 38 pass through the planar central portion 32, one of which functions as a first fluid inlet passage and the other of which functions as a first fluid outlet passage. Preferably, the flow openings 36 and 38 are diagonally located relative to each other near diagonally opposite edges of the planar portion 32, as illustrated in FIG. 4. However, the flow openings 36, 38 could also be located in different locations; for example, they could both be located the same distance from a common edge, of the plate. The heat exchanger plate 18 also includes raised first and second bosses 40, 42 that are integrally formed with the planar central portion 32. Each of the bosses 40, 42 includes an annular wall 44 that terminates at an annular support portion 46. The annular support portion 46 of the first boss 40 defines an opening 48 that communicates with a flow passage 50 that is defined by the annular wall 44 of the boss 40. Similarly, the annular support portion 46 of the second boss 42 defines an opening 52 that communicates with a flow passage defined by the annular wall 44 of the boss 42.
The alternating heat exchanger plates 16 are substantially identical to heat exchanger plates 18 and thus each include, with reference to
Heat exchange plates 16 and 18 are, in a preferred embodiment, identical with the one exception that the locations of the bosses and flow openings are reversed between the plates 16 and 18, as is readably apparent from a comparison of
With reference to
In one embodiment, the central planar portions of plates 12, 16 and 18 are each formed from material of the same thickness, with reinforcing plate 14 being formed from a thicker material sufficient to provide necessary strength for the final flow channel.
With reference to
With reference to the Figures, and in particular
The first fluid flow channels 26 are defined between the bottom surfaces of the central planar portions 54 of heat exchanger plates 16 and the upper surfaces of the central planar portions 32 of the heat exchanger plates 18. Similarly, the second fluid flow channels 28 are defined between an upper surface of the central planar portion 54 of the heat exchanger plate 16 and the lower surfaces of the central planar portions 32 of the heat exchanger plates 18. As best seen in
As can best be appreciated from
The second port 82 for the first fluid is aligned with the second flow openings 38 through the plates 18 and the openings 66 through the second bosses 64 in alternating plates 16 to provide a second flow chamber for the first fluid that is in communication with the first fluid flow channels 26. One of the first fluid flow chamber 88 and the second fluid flow chamber for the first fluid functions as an inlet chamber, and the other as an outlet chamber.
The first port 80 for the second fluid is aligned with the openings 48 through the first bosses 40 of the heat exchanger plates 18 and the openings 58 of the plates 16 to provide a flow chamber for the second fluid, as indicated conceptually by phantom line 90 in
The peripheral flange 74 of the end plate 12 projects in an opposite direction than the flange 70 of the final heat exchanger plate 16 in the stack 24. The heat exchanger plate 12 is dimensioned so that the flange 74 can be closely received within an upper portion of the flange 70 of the final heat exchanger plate with an outer surface of the flange 74 overlapping with an inner surface of the flange 70 as illustrated in FIG. 3. Brazing material 92 sealably secures the flanges 70 and 74 about their respective perimeters. Reinforcing plate 14 is brazed to an inner surface of the end plate central planar portion 72, and to the raised boss portions of plate 16, and to the turbulizer plate 22. As noted-above, a final fluid flow channel 30 is defined between the reinforcing plate 14 and the final heat exchanger plate in the stack 24. In the illustrated embodiment, the final fluid flow channel 30 is a fluid flow channel for the second fluid, however, in different configurations it could act as a flow channel for the first fluid. The planar support portion 46 of the boss 62 sealingly engages the reinforcing plate 14, thereby ensuring the first fluid flow chamber 88 is not in communication with the final fluid flow channel 30. Similarly, the planar support portion of the second boss 64 of the final heat exchanger plate 16 also sealingly engages the reinforcing plate 14.
Reinforcing plate 14 and end plate 12 provide the combined strength required to resist the pressure present at the top end of the plate stack 24. Similarly, connector plate 20 reinforces the bottom end of the stack 24 to provide the required strength at such end. The combined use of an end plate 14 and reinforcing plate 12 can result in more pressure resistance than a single plate of the same thickness as the overlap joint formed between flanges 74 and 70 tends to be stronger than the butt joint that would exist if a thicker single plate were used in place of separate plates 12 and 14.
In the illustrated embodiment, the flange 74 projects from the inner surface of the planar central end portion 72 a distance substantially equal to the thickness of the reinforcing plate 14. Such a configuration permits the turbulizer plate 22 in the final fluid flow channel 30 to extend relatively close to inner surface of the portion of flange 70 that defines the periphery of the flow channel 30.
Referring to
In one possible use of the heat exchanger 10, a first fluid enters the heat exchanger 10 through port 78 and flows in parallel through the first fluid flow channels 26, and subsequently out of the heat exchanger through the port 82 in connecting plate 20. A second fluid enters the heat exchanger through fluid port 80, and flows in parallel through each of the second fluid flow channels 28 and the final fluid flow channel 30, and leaves the heat exchanger 10 through the fluid port 84 in connector plate 20. In such a manner, heat is exchanged between the two fluids as they flow through the alternating flow channels of the stack 24.
It will thus be appreciated that the present invention provides a stacked-dish plate-type heat exchanger in which the final dish heat exchanger plate in the stack is actively used in the heat exchanging process, thereby eliminating any unused space. The overlapping joint between the end plate and the final dish heat exchanger plate provides a pressure resistant configuration. The exposed edge of the flange of the last heat exchanger plate in the stack is minimized. In the illustrated example, as shown in
It will be appreciated that a number of variations from the described embodiment are possible. For example, the plates have been illustrated as rectangular, however, different plate configurations could be used in conformance with the present invention, such as circular or oblong-shaped plates. The alternating flow channels have been illustrated as having the same height. However, the alternating plates could have different flange heights so that the alternating flow channels have correspondingly different heights. In some configurations, separate collars could be used in the place of bosses 62, 64, 40 and 42. The locations of the flow openings and bosses could be varied, for example, the flow openings through each plate could be longitudinally positioned relative to each other rather than diagonally located, or could be located side-by-side, separated by a barrier forcing an indirect U-shaped flow path.
The turbulizer plates 22 could extend from end-to-end of the heat exchanger, or could terminate prior to the flow openings. In some embodiments, integrally formed dimples or ribs on plates 16, 18 could be used in the place of turbulizer plates 22 for flow augmentation and structural support, and in some embodiments turbulizers 22 may be entirely omitted from some or all of the flow channels. Although the heat exchanger has been described above from the point of view of handling two heat transfer fluids, it will be appreciated that more than two fluids can be accommodated simply by nesting or expanding around the described structures using principles similar to those described above. In some embodiments, the reinforcing plate may not be required so long as the end plate 12 is thick enough or otherwise sufficiently supported to withstand any pressure applied to it. In some embodiments, the reinforcing plate 14 may dimpled or ribbed or be formed with rippled convolutions.
Although embodiments of the heat exchanger described above have included a core stack of a plurality of dish-type plates 16, 18, with a final inverted dish-type end plate 12, in some embodiments the inverted dish-type end plate 12 could be used, with or without reinforcing plate 14, and with or without a turbulizer 22, in combination with just a single dish-type plate 16 or 18 (in which case the dish-type place 16 or 18 need not have raised bosses with openings formed therethrough). Such a configuration could be used, for example, for a low-profile heat exchanger having a single enclosed fluid flow channel between the end plate 12 and the adjacent single dish-type plate 16 or 18.
As will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the foregoing disclosure, many alterations and modifications are possible in the practice of this invention without departing from the spirit or scope thereof. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is to be construed in accordance with the substance defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2383649 | Apr 2002 | CA | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4872578 | Fuerschbach et al. | Oct 1989 | A |
4892136 | Ichihara et al. | Jan 1990 | A |
5099912 | Tajima et al. | Mar 1992 | A |
5511612 | Tajima et al. | Apr 1996 | A |
5931219 | Kull et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
6182746 | Wiese | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6340054 | Schwarz et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6595271 | Komoda | Jul 2003 | B2 |
20020129926 | Yamaguchi | Sep 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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196 54 365 | Jun 1998 | DE |
0 347 961 | Dec 1989 | EP |
0 597 778 | May 1994 | EP |
0623 798 | Feb 1999 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030201094 A1 | Oct 2003 | US |