In the past, during the last segment of a typical vacuum heat treatment, different gases have been used to cool down or quench a metal load once such load was thermal processed in a vacuum chamber. Such cooling process is carried out by means of injection of said gases into the chamber to achieve certain pressure inside the chamber, where the load is thermally processed. Once the processed load reaches the desired final low temperature due to the heat removal by the injected gas, such quenching gas contained in the chamber is lost to the atmosphere. In practice, the gas is not recovered because to make it possible, the chamber containing the cooling or process gas should be evacuated from said chamber into a separate container in two conditions of the system: first condition is when the process chamber at the end or in the last stage of the process has a positive pressure, and the process chamber is connected to the receiving container so that the gas is driven by its positive pressure, and after the transfer of the gas is accomplished and both chambers reach equilibrium, the transfer of the gas should be continued and accomplished by means of a compressor, in which case could take a long and impractical period of time, or to operate a too high capacity compressor; a second condition is when the inside of the chamber ends the cooling process at atmospheric quenching gas pressure, or reaches atmospheric cooling gas pressure, then the transfer of the gas to the adjacent container might be accomplished by the vacuum pumping system, but that is not possible because the container should reach a higher than atmospheric pressure for to the accumulation of recovered and storage gas in said container. So the recovery of gases in the mentioned process, and in some other processes using for instance inert gases at a certain pressure and especially in vacuum processes, and that are economically attractive to recover, have not been carried out in practice due to the mentioned concepts and practical implications.
The present invention describes a method for the recovery of gases used during a cooling stage or last stage of a thermal vacuum treatment, or during other treatments, by means of transferring the gas to be recovered from the chamber where gas is used for the process in to a receiver vessel that is kept at a constant pressure, always close to the atmospheric pressure. The receiver vessel is able to maintain this constant pressure by means of changing its volume. According to the gas flow entrance of the recovered gas into the receiving container; that is, the gas flow into the receiver is always correlated to the volume change of the receiver, by means of a control device that produces a change in volume of the receiver proportional to the flow of gas at constant pressure. So that, as the gas flows from the process chamber driven by the excess pressure within the chamber, or driven by the vacuum pumping system into the variable volume receiver, the constant pressure of said receiver, allows the gas to flow from the process chamber into the receiver. Because in any condition or pressure in the chamber, the gas will always “sees” such receiver at a constant atmospheric pressure at any moment during the gas recovery process. The gas flowing from the process chamber into the receiver might travel through a heat exchanger to reduce the temperature of the hot gas coming from the process chamber and arrive at ambient temperature when entering into the receiver, so that the receiver is not damaged by the hot gas exhaust from the relative high temperature of the chamber. When the gas is transferred from the process chamber into the variable volume/constant pressure container, such container, in receiving the recovering gas, may increase its volume up to the point that the pressure in the chamber reaches a desired high vacuum. That is, during the transfer gas process, the gas may be driven during a first period by the excess pressure in the chamber, and then, when the system (the chamber pressure) reaches equilibrium with the atmospheric pressure of the receiver, the vacuum pumping drives the transfer of the gas, evacuating the chamber up to a desired high vacuum level, so that most of the gas has been transferred into the receiver, leaving a vacuum stage or no gas to be recovered in the process chamber. Once the gas is contained in the receiver, which becomes a holding vessel for the following recovery process step, the receiver or holding container is connected through a large exhaust nipple and valve, into an intake of a high performance compressor, that takes or receives the gas at a constant atmospheric pressure, and therefore having no problem of intake high pressure differentials. The compressor then transfers the gas into a high pressure storage tank, leaving it ready to reutilization for a next treatment cycle.
For example, a complete gas recovery cycle in a typical vacuum heat treatment process might comprise the following steps and process parameters figures:
During the last stage in a typical vacuum treatment of an alloy steel, the highest temperature of a quenching treatment cycle is reached and maintained during 40 min to get uniform through temperature in the processed load. After such period of time, the heat flow from the chamber resistances that maintain a constant temperature of 980° C. in the steel load, is interrupted to allow the beginning of the quenching process by injecting inert gas to obtain, for example 2 bars in the chamber, and hit the steel pieces load to remove heat and reduce its temperature at a given cooling rate, depending on the configuration of the system, thermal capability of the quenching gas, flow rate, and the close circuit gas cooling system capacity of the furnace. The cooling gas in the chamber may be recirculated through the load in a close loop inside the system of the furnace. Once the load reaches, say 90° C., the cooling inert gas driven by its positive pressure, is allowed to flow by opening a valve, into the constant atmospheric pressure receiver, which in turn start to increase its volume to keep the constant pressure desired. Once the system reaches equilibrium and the chamber and receiver reaches the same pressure (atmospheric), the vacuum pumping system evacuates the chamber into the receiver which in turn holds the total gas to be recovered by leaving a high vacuum level in the process chamber. In this condition, a valve is closed to isolate the holding receiver vessel from the process chamber; then the chamber is alleviated to atmosphere, able to receive air into said chamber because of the now low temperature of the heating elements. Before the receiving holding container is filled with the recovered gas, the exhaust valve of 8 to 12 inch of said container, is opened to connect it to the intake of the compressor which in turn moves the gas into the storage tank above for example 50 psi , depending on the system characteristics (gas type and compressor capability). The gas in the storage tank, has certain level of oxygen contamination, due to the fact that the gas recovering is made from a system that has operated at a certain low pressure, say a good vacuum of 10 (−5) torr, still containing certain level of impurities, mainly oxygen. So when the gas is reused, the following cycles will contain more contaminants and so the number of cycles is limited by this concept, which in turn is determined to a certain extent, by the operating vacuum level in the furnace. The gas is then prepared to be reused in a next cycle when it is kept in the storage tank, as this is connected to the furnace system, and in time, the high pressure in the tank will drive the injection of the cooling gas into the chamber; for instance, the gas flow from the tank into the process chamber, may take place in a pressure range much below 50 psi so for example, a 600 cubic feet furnace chamber, a double volume in the storage high pressure (above 50 psi) tank, will contain enough gas to carry out a quenching process taking place at 2 bars inside the furnace. A variant to the inside recycling of the cooling gas might be the direct injection of the gas into the chamber and then directly allowed to exhaust to the receiver, as in any case it is to be recovered.
The limiting factor in this case is the total amount of gas to be used and the holding capacity of the receiver.
The description of the concepts and functions for parts and components, are described in the following drawings within the preferred embodiment of this invention.
The general process is described in
In
Once the gas is in the process of been transferred from chamber (1) to the receiver container (7), and said receiver has started its expansion, say to point A as shown in
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4326867 | Stokes | Apr 1982 | A |
5368067 | Cook, Jr. | Nov 1994 | A |
6217633 | Ohmi et al. | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6851316 | Micke et al. | Feb 2005 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040211296 A1 | Oct 2004 | US |