Claims
- 1. A method for providing heat transfer plates with a layer of plastic protecting material which comprises assembling a plurality of heat transfer plates to form a plate heat exchanger having plate interspaces for the through flow of heat exchange fluids, vaporizing said protective material to bring it into the gaseous phase, introducing a gaseous medium comprising said surface protecting material in gaseous form into at least one plate interspace of said plate heat exchanger and causing said material to condense on the surfaces of the heat transfer plates forming said plate interspace.
- 2. Method according to claim 1, characterized in that the assembled heat exchanger is connected both to a subpressure source and to an apparatus containing said gaseous medium with the surface protecting material, the gaseous medium with the surface protecting material then being sucked into the plate interspaces of the plate heat exchanger by said subpressure source.
- 3. Method according to claim 1, characterized in that the heat transfer plates are assembled permanently, before the gaseous medium with the surface protecting material is introduced into the plate interspaces.
- 4. A method according to claim 1 wherein the heat transfer plates are brazed to join them permanently before the gaseous medium with the surface protecting material is introduced into the plate interspaces.
- 5. A method according to claim 1 wherein the heat transfer plates are welded to join them permanently before the gaseous medium with the surface protecting material is introduced into the plate interspaces.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
9100889 |
Mar 1991 |
SEX |
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Parent Case Info
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/117,144, filed on Sep. 13, 1993, now abandoned and also International Application PCT-SE92-00172 filed on Mar. 20, 1992 and which designated the U.S.
Heat transfer plates are made of many different materials which are more or less resistant to corrosion or other influence by different heat exchange fluids. As to heat transfer plates of metal, which for a certain purpose are not sufficiently resistant to corrosion, it is technically possible, but in practice difficult, to increase the resistance to corrosion of the plates at an acceptable cost by providing the plates with an outer layer of another metal. The possibility of providing metallic heat transfer plates with a protecting layer of plastic, which would be cheaper than a layer of metal, does not seem to have been used to any large degree. This may be for several reasons.
Thus, heat transfer plates of thin sheet metal are often provided with corrugations or other protuberances in their heat transferring portions, which portions, in a plate heat exchanger, abut against each other at a high pressure at a great number of contact places distributed across the heat transferring portions. If the plates were covered by thin plastic layers, such layers would easily be broken at the said contact places.
The possibility of providing heat transfer plates intended for brazed plate heat exchangers with thin plastic layers has been excluded because such plastic layers would obviously be destroyed in the brazing together of the heat transfer plates.
US Referenced Citations (11)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
61-149794 |
Jul 1986 |
JPX |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
117144 |
Sep 1993 |
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