The invention relates to a method and system for supplying water to cooling towers.
Cooling towers are compact, energy-efficient devices for rejecting heat into the ambient air. The essential physical process is that of water evaporation in air that is distant from its moisture saturation conditions to an extent that varies according to local climatic conditions. Since the latent heat of water is very high, i.e. in the range of 2500 kJ/kg under atmospheric pressure, a low evaporation rate is needed to cool the flow of circulating liquid water. It has been known since 976 that cooling towers may be a source of vectorization of pathogenic bacteria such as legionella. This vectorization takes place through liquid aerosols with a well-defined size ranging from 0.5 to 6 micrometers, i.e. 0.5 to 6 10−6 m. Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to define a method and a system by which it is possible to eliminate these aerosols or micro-droplets.
Cooling towers are generally equipped with various devices to eliminate droplet drift such as the droplet drift eliminators presented for example in the U.S. Pat. No. 3,731,461 or the UK patent No. 2,206,683, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. However, the measuring means used to measure the size of the aerosols and their number are recent and not well known or, in the case of some of them, difficult to implement. Only recent devices using white light diffraction at 90 degrees can be used to count both the populations of droplets and their size, which is placed at the outlet of the cooling towers. The manufacturers communicate the drift level in terms of percentage of the circulating water flow rate; typical values range from 0.01% to 0.06%. This appears to be low but, when seen in relation to the circulating flow rate, there are several tens of liters per hour that are sent out in the form of aerosols having a size of some microns, representing values of more than several billions of micro-droplets per hour. Such numbers have been measured at the outlet of cooling towers provided with droplet eliminator systems. The devices are not efficient in stopping micro-droplets sized between 0.5 and 6 micrometers. The present invention therefore seeks to deal with the problem at source in preventing the very formation of liquid aerosols. To this end, the present invention proceeds upon the desirability of developing a novel and comprehensive design for the flow of air and water in cooling towers.
The cooling tower is formed chiefly by a water distribution system, a packing consisting of exchange surfaces for putting air and water into contact, a ventilation system and a water recovery system.
The usual or improved devices, as presented in the U.S. Pat. No. 4,579,692 or WO 99/30096 or WO 94/21366 (each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety) for the distribution of water on the packing are spray devices, rotating booms or overflow systems that shed water onto the packing. All these systems have the major defect of generating aerosols even before the water flows onto the packing. Furthermore, in being concerned solely with increasing the air-water contact surface, certain patents such as the U.S. Pat. No. 2,517,639 or No. 3,652,066 (each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety) even claim an increase in the number of droplets formed by various devices to increase the air/water contact surface.
To prevent the formation of liquid aerosols or micro-droplets for either cross-flow or counter-flow circulation of air and water in cooling towers, this formation of liquid aerosols is prevented on three successive portions of the flow of water in relation to the airflow: during the distribution of water, during the flow of water on the exchange surface and during the recovery of water at the end of the exchange surface or packing. The term packing is taken here in its broader sense of a solid surface providing for the efficient contact of water and air.
To this end, the present invention generates a film of water that adheres to the wall of the packing, in checking the thickness and proper distribution on the surface. This is a first step in preventing the formation of micro-droplets. Then, it is necessary to check the water flow regime on the exchange surface so that the height of the wavelets that form on this free-boundary flow is low enough for the wavelets not to be clipped by the airflows. Finally, the water films should be recovered without being crossed by airflows.
The initial distribution of water on the surface is essential so as not to create aerosols of variable sizes during this distribution. The method devised as an embodiment of the invention is a method using overflow with controlled thickness and with film adhering to the wall.
Once the water film of homogeneous thickness has been distributed throughout the width of the plate, the tilt of the plate, its surface condition, its hydrophilic properties or, on the contrary, its hydrophobic properties will determine the speed of water on the plate in conjunction with co-current or cross-current airflow circulation. Indeed, the water circulates by gravity and hence its motion is uniformly accelerated by gravity. This acceleration needs to be controlled to limit the increase in the speed of water on the surface which leads to the formation of wavelets. The Wallis criterion is used to compute the relative speed thresholds of air and water leading to the pulling away of the droplets by the relationship UG*+m√{square root over (UL*)}=C where U* is the non-dimensional speed, the indices G and L respectively designate air and water and m is an empirically determined parameter that depends on the surface condition of the exchange surfaces. The value of C makes it possible to know whether or not the droplet pull-away conditions are fulfilled. Other more sophisticated computations taking account of the surface tension of the water, the gravity, the wavelength of the wavelets, certain thermo-physical properties of air and water and of course their speeds similarly lead to defining the droplet pull-away conditions. These computations and experimental devices have been used to verify the basis of the invention.
The present invention relates to a method for supplying water to a cooling tower in which the supply is done by means of an anti-turbulence water tank and a means such as a dispenser lip, wherein films of water adhering to the exchange surfaces are generated in order to prevent the formation of liquid aerosols during the exchange between air and water on these surfaces.
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the exchange surfaces or plates are tilted by an angle, for example ranging from 2° to 10°, relative to horizontal, the value of this angle being such that the acceleration of the water film on the exchange surfaces is controlled so that the speed of the film adhering to the surfaces prevents the clipping of the wavelets by the counter-current or cross-current air flows.
According an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, blower air nozzles are provided, comprising troughs inclined for example by an angle of 1° to 2° in a plane perpendicular to the flow of the water film in order to collect this film without its being broken by the airflow, thus preventing the formation of droplets during the recovery of the water films after they had been cooled by auto-evaporation in the airflows.
To ensure constant thickness of the water film on the plates or exchange surfaces, in one embodiment the number of surfaces provided with water depends on the water flow rate. In this case, the supplied surfaces are, for example, each subjected to the same flow rate.
The invention also relates to a method for the production of water cooled by means of a cooling tower using a water distribution system and at least one exchange surface between a water flow and an airflow in which the water distribution system generates a flow in the form of a water film applied to the exchange surface, the values of thickness of the water film and of the relative speed of the water flow in relation to the airflow being chosen to prevent the formation of liquid aerosols during the exchange between the air and the water on these surfaces.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the distribution of water is obtained through overflow, by a distribution means providing for a homogeneous distribution of the water film throughout the width of the exchange surface.
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the water distribution system comprises an anti-turbulence water tank.
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the exchange surface or plate is tilted by an angle, for example ranging from 2° to 10° relative to the horizontal, the value of this angle being such that the relative speed of the flow of water in relation to the airflow remains below a threshold value starting from which aerosols get created.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the maximum speed UL* of the water film is determined by the formula:
U
G
*+m√{square root over (UL*)}=C,
where UG* is the speed of the airflow, m is a parameter that is a function of the exchange surface, and C is the value of the Wallace criterion beyond which aerosols get created. The airflow is for example generated by a distribution system situated at one of the ends of the exchange surface.
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, there are provided troughs inclined, for example, by an angle of 1° to 2°, in a plane perpendicular to the flow of the water film in order to collect this water film, without this film being in contact with the airflow, thus preventing the formation of droplets during the recovery of the water films after they have been cooled by auto-evaporation in the airflows.
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, to ensure constant thickness of the water film on the plates or exchange surfaces, the number of surfaces provided with water depends on the water flow rate. In this case, the surfaces supplied are for example each subjected to the same flow rate.
The flow of the water film is preferably laminar.
Other features and advantages of the invention should appear from the description of some of its embodiments, made with reference to the appended figures of which
The following detailed description, given by way of example, and not intended to limit the present invention solely thereto, will best be understood in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like components or features in the various figures are represented by like reference numbers:
This detailed description made with reference to the figures will provide for a clear understanding of the invention. In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention,
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention,
In an orthonormal reference system x,y,z where x is the horizontal axis in the direction of flow of water on the plate, y is the vertical axis and z is the axis that forms a succession of horizontal planes with x, the plates form a first angle α between 2° and 10° and preferably around 5° above the horizontal, in the plane x, y as shown in
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention,
Another exemplary embodiment of the present invention is shown in
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention,
In short, the invention relates to a method and system used to control the flow of water films on the exchange walls of an exchange surface of a cooling tower by the association of a water tank and a dispenser lip ensuring that the film or films have a defined thickness and adhere to the exchange walls as soon as the flow of the film or films begins, this being achieved repetitively on each exchange wall.
In the example, exchange walls between air and water are inclined to the horizontal by a small angle, for example ranging from 2° to 10°, thus ensuring the flow of water by gravity and at the same time limiting the increase in speed on the plates so as to: (a) prevent the increase in the speed on the plate to; and (b) prevent the droplets from being pulled away by the airflow.
The recovery of the water films is done in recovery troughs perpendicular to the flow of the films of water on the plates. These troughs are inclined to the horizontal by an angle equal, for example, to 1° to 2° and are used to recover the water films without being crossed by air flows.
Their air is blown in by nozzles interposed between the successive water-flow plates in such a way that the air circulates in a counter-current or, if necessary, in a cross-current with respect to the water films and thus enables the evaporation of the water which cools the water flow on the plates.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0451128 | Jun 2004 | FR | national |
This application is a §371 from PCT/FR2005/050398 filed May 31, 2005, which claims priority from FR 04/51128 filed Jun. 8, 2004, each of which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2005/050398 | 5/31/2005 | WO | 00 | 7/31/2007 |