1. Field
This application relates to the compressing of gases such that a low pressure gas is compressed to a high pressure gas. The compressor methods and apparatus described herein may be used for natural gas storage for natural gas powered motor vehicles.
2. Prior Art
Traditionally, multistage reciprocating piston type compressors have been used to compress gases. These piston type compressors are efficient at compressing low-to-medium level pressures. These compressors typically rotate at high speeds and employ oiless designs to eliminate oil in the compressed gas stream. Oil in the gas stream has known detrimental effects to injectors and valves. These piston type compressors suffer from high heat buildup and reduced longevity due to their oiless design.
More recently, hydraulic-based gas compressors are being used due to several advantages; these compressors operate at much slower rates thus producing less heat, have long life due to the lubricating effect of the hydraulic oil, and do not tend to aspirate oil into the gas like reciprocating piston type compressors.
There are many hydraulic-based compressors described in prior art that use a motor or engine driven hydraulic pump to produce high pressure fluid. The high pressure fluid is the working medium used to then compress a gas. Prior art describes compression taking place in one or more cylinders. Some embodiments include and some do not include a piston or other barrier to separate the gas and hydraulic fluid. Other art describes completely separate cylinders (one driving and one being driven) connected by a common rod.
Because many gases occur or are delivered at very low pressures (<5 psi), some prior art hydraulic based gas compressors describe the use of a pre-compressor to increase the gas from very low pressure to a medium pressure (15-200 psi) before hydraulic based compressing to the final high pressure (>2500 psi).
Hydraulic based compressors hold many advantages over more traditional reciprocating piston based compressors such as decreased heat, maintenance, operating speeds and noise, along with increased longevity and output pressure capability.
The disadvantage of hydraulic based compressors is the decreased inefficiency inherent in not compressing the gas directly as in a reciprocating piston type compressor; first the hydraulic fluid must be compressed, then the high pressure fluid is used to impart high pressure on the gas itself. This extra process step creates inefficiencies of energy transfer to the final desired product, a compressed gas. Hydraulics are also prone to small oil leaks that form on many fittings, seals and valves that collect dust, which it turns captures heat. Hydraulic based compressors are often more expensive to manufacture because of the extra pump, hoses, valves, controls and fluid storage and cooling equipment associated with hydraulic equipment.
In accordance with one embodiment, a better method to compress gases is to use the same gas being compressed as the working medium that also does the compressing. This method offers all the advantages of hydraulic-based gas compression with greater efficiency, less equipment, no hydraulic leaks, and lower manufacturing costs.
One embodiment of a gas compressor system is illustrated in
An engine/motor 113 drives piston compressor 103 by an enabled electric clutch 104. During this ‘filling stroke’, gas is drawn from input 101 through check valve 102 and valve 105 into the right hand sides of driving 106 and driven 109 cylinders. When position sensors 108, 108b, 108c sense that the cylinder stroke is complete and pressure reaches the desired level at gage 101a, the filling stroke is complete. The ‘compression stroke’ then begins when control electronics 111 directs valve 105 to shift position to direct intermediate-pressure gas from compressor 103 into the left side of driving cylinder 106. The driving cylinder connecting rod 107 is forced to the right, compressing the gas trapped on the right side of driven cylinder 109. High-pressure gas flows out through check valve 102b and into a connected external storage tank (or on board vehicle tank) connected to high-pressure outlet 112. Compressed gas exiting driven cylinder 109 is blocked by check valve 102a. Position sensor 108, 108b, 108c detects that the connecting rod 107 has travelled fully to the right completing a compression stroke. Control electronics 111 shifts valve 105 to begin another filling stroke. Control electronics 111 controls the repetition of filling and compression strokes until the pressure gage 110b detects that the desired high pressure has been reached, completing the desired gas compression.
An alternative embodiment of a compressor system is illustrated in
Operation is identical to the operation of the first embodiment except that in this embodiment multiple driving cylinders 106, 106a (two shown) are being employed.
An alternative embodiment of a compressor system is illustrated in
Operation is very similar to the operation of the first embodiment except that in this embodiment, with every stroke of the driving cylinder 106, both filling and compressing is occurring simultaneously. When the driving stroke is towards the right, right driven cylinder 109a is performing compression and left driven cylinder 109 is being filled. When the driving stroke is towards the right, right driven cylinder 109a is being filled and left driven cylinder 109 is performing compression.
An alternative embodiment of the compressor system is illustrated in
Operation is identical to the embodiment described in
An alternative embodiment of the compressor system's piston-type compressor subsystem is illustrated in
Control electronics 111,111a enables and disables compressors as needed based on various inputs such as incoming gas availability, temperature of compressors and desired gas compression rate. Compressors 103, 103a, 103b, 103c, 103d are enabled by energizing electric clutches 104, 104a, 104b, 104c, 104d. Rotational force is supplied by engine/motor 113, 113a while pulley 114, 114a supplies tension to belt/chain 115, 115a.
Accordingly the reader will see that, according to one embodiment of the invention, I have provided a gas compressor method and apparatus that combines the advantages of traditional reciprocating piston type compressors with the advantages of hydraulic-based compressors. These advantages are accomplished by employing the same gas being compressed (the final product) as the working medium to accomplish compression.
While the above description contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of any embodiment, abut as exemplifications of the presently preferred embodiments thereof. Many other ramifications and variations are possible within the teachings of the various embodiments. For example, the cylinders described can be increased or decreased in volume to meet the desired compressed gas output. The quantity of driving and driven cylinders can be increased or decreased to meet a desired balance between volume and pressure of the compressed gas and working medium pressure requirements. The driving and driven cylinders can be connected directly or through the use of mechanisms to increase the mechanical advantage. The driving and driven cylinders can be manufactured in many different shapes to meet mechanical or packaging constraints or requirements.
Thus the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, and not by the examples given.
This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application No. 61/588,237, filed Jan. 19, 2012 by the present inventors.