This Application is a Section 371 National Stage Application of International Application No. PCT/GB2007/002751, filed Jul. 19, 2007, published as WO 2008/025938, in English, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The invention relates to improvements in compressor units, and in particular to a modular compressor unit which has separate sections for the compressor, the controls and the air intake.
Oil free compressors typically comprise a single or a multi-stage compressor, a motor and gear box to drive the compressor and controls for operating the compressor. Oil free compressors may also comprise means for directing a cooling flow of air. Hitherto the design of compressor units has been dictated by the components of the units and their operation, and little consideration has been given to the overall unit design. As a result of which, the units are typically not optimised for low noise and are usually unwieldy to handle, transport and service.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to improve the overall design of a compressor unit to overcome these disadvantages.
The invention therefore provides a modular compressor unit comprising three separate adjoining sections, being an intake section, a compression section and a control section; wherein the intake section comprises air intake means which provide an inlet for ambient air to be compressed and for cooling the compressor motor and comprises filters to filter air entering the intake means, noise attenuation means provided in their intake means, and means for directing air to components in the compression section; the compression section comprises a compressor, a motor arranged to drive the compressor and all components within the unit required to cool compressed air, the motor and to remove heat from the compression section; and wherein the control section houses all the control means for operating the compressor unit.
This modular design of the compressor unit is unique for oil free compressor units. No other compressor has a layout that is similar and many compressors are unpackaged.
The modular design provides the following advantages:—
Scaling—the modular design allows for scaling of model sizes up and down the range with ease. The assembly procedure will be the same for all models, but the components will just be a different size.
The invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to and as shown in the accompanying drawings, in which:—
Referring first to
Compression Section 12
Referring to
In addition to the compressor, the compression section 12 of the unit 10 contains the motor, all ancillary items required to cool the compressed air and remove the heat from the section 12 itself. The ancillary items are a cooling blower (not shown), a ventilation fan 49, coolers 16, 19, a water circuit and a blowdown circuit.
The air compressed by the 1st stage of the compressor exits the compressor through its discharge (not shown) and flows through the 1st stage cooler inlet manifold 17 and into the cooler where it is cooled before entering the 2nd stage of the compressor. This cooler will be referred to hereafter as the intercooler 16. The air exits the intercooler 16 through the 2nd stage cooler manifold 21 and enters the 2nd stage. The compressed air, which is at final delivery pressure, exits the 2nd stage and is directed to an inlet 18 of the aftercooler 19. The air is cooled by the aftercooler 19 before exiting the unit 10 via the air discharge 20 through a non-return valve (NRV) and into the customer's supply. The NRV prevents air from the customer's system from re-entering the circuit when the compressor is stopped or is “offload”.
The intercooler 16 and aftercooler 19 are of a different design to the traditional shell and tube coolers usually used with these type of compressors. They are more compact and therefore enable the mounting arrangement of the present invention to be used.
When the compressor stops, or goes “offload”, the residual air that has been compressed by the compressor has to be discharged to atmosphere to release the pressure in the compressor unit 10. To enable this, a solenoid valve (not shown) is provided on the delivery pipe that is situated before the NRV. This valve opens on a signal generated by the controls and allows the air to flow through an exhaust silencer into the intake section 11. The valve remains open until a signal is generated for it to shut again, i.e. when the compressor goes back “onload”.
The motor is usually cooled by water and/or air and the cooling air is provided by a suitable motor cooling blower and is exhausted, along with any leakage air from the compression process, through two exhaust tubes. These tubes are in line with a motor air exhaust box 51. This is a box which is specifically designed to remove any noise generated by the compressor and direct the cooling flow, with minimal losses, to the outside of the compressor unit 10. It contains various specially designed baffles and sound attenuation material to do this. Preferably the motor air exhaust box 51 is a foam lined sheet metal box which has a specific shape to remove line of sight to the exhaust ports and to knock out as much sound energy as possible before the exhaust air exits the housing roof panels 63. The baffles have been designed in conjunction with the box so as to not only knock out noise, but also to assist the airflow so that the pressure drops stay within specified limits.
The motor cooling blower is preferably mounted directly to the aftercooler 19 and directly on to the motor cooling air inlet manifold.
The cooling water enters the compressor unit 10 through a water intake 27 and initially has to pass through a solenoid valve (not shown) that is only opened on a signal from the compressor when it starts. The water then flows to a water inlet manifold that distributes the flow to all areas which require cooling water, namely the motor, the intercooler 16, the aftercooler 19 and the variable speed drive. The water flow to these components is controlled by an orifice in the water outlet manifold 28 that then channels the water back out of the compressor.
The compressor is mounted on the intercooler 16 via the cooler manifolds 17, 21. All of the components of the compression section 12, except for the ventilation fan, are mounted on a sub-base 22 that sits on anti-vibration mounts 23. The 1st stage inlet pipe 24 and the 2nd stage discharge pipe are preferably flexible connections, which allow for some movement and to allow for manufacturing tolerances of assemblies.
The arrangement of the compressor mounting is unique because it is mounted between the 1st stage discharge and 2nd stage intake flanges on the intercooler manifolds 17,21 with the motor suspended in the middle. The flanges allow for thermal expansion, thereby avoiding the need for more bulky and expensive expansion joints.
The mounting of the compressor and the design of the manifolds 17,18 also means that the compressor is suspended, which provides easy servicing access to the compressor and the coolers 16,19. The unit 10 of the present invention has been specifically designed to provide this advantage.
The frame of the compressor unit housing comprises side rails 60, centre rails 61 and columns 64, and provides the structure which supports the weight of the compressor. The horizontal side rails 60 are located at the top of the housing and are attached to the intake section 11 and the controls section 13 at either end. The centre rails 61 are attached to each side rail 60 and support the roof panels 63.
The centre rails 61, which support the roof cover panels 63, are also used to jack up the compressor from its mounted position at either end via suitable attachment means. The compressor is mounted directly on to specially designed manifolds, which connect it to the intercooler 16. Instead of the traditional shell or tube cooler, the intercooler 16 has a special design, which facilitates this mounting arrangement. The use of some types of oil free bearings makes it possible for this mounting arrangement to be viable as the system is effectively vibrationless.
Mounting the compressor in this way has the following advantages:
This is a unique arrangement for compressors. In prior art arrangements having an air end/motor unit mounted on top of a cooler, this requires flexible connections on the 1st stage discharge and the 2nd stage intake and the motor is mounted via feet on top of the coolers.
Each of the above features contribute to the compact nature of the inventive arrangement.
Intake Section 11
The intake section 11 provides the means for the compressor to draw air into the unit 10. The air initially passes through a coarse filter mesh 30 on the outside of an intake duct 31, as shown in
Cooling air for the compressor motor is also drawn through the coarse filter mesh 30 before passing through a gap in the intake duct 31, through a secondary filter 37 and into the cooling air blower housed in the compression section 12.
Controls Section 13
The controls section 13 contains all of the electrical components required to control the compressor 14. As can be seen in
As a safety requirement, incoming mains electricity passes through an isolating switch 43 in the first sub-section 40 before it is distributed to the rest of the electrical circuits. It then passes through an EMC (Electromagnetic Compatability) filter 44 to a line reactor and into the variable speed drive 45, which is housed in the second sub-section 41. The supply for the auxiliary components is taken off in between the EMC filter 44 and the line reactor to power the control transformer, bearing controller, contactors and user interface in the third sub-section 42.
The auxiliary components section 42 and the incoming power supply section 40 have openable doors 46 (see
The controls section 13 is cooled by air that is drawn through two external filters 48 that are situated in the top of the two hinged access doors 46 of section 13. The air is directed through the section 13 by finger protection guards, which have been designed to also aid with noise reduction. The control section 13 has various openings that allow the air to flow between the incoming power supply section 40, variable speed drive section 41, and auxiliary component section 42 to cool the components as necessary. These openings are different sizes to direct the correct amount of air to the various parts of the control section 13 and then through openings 46 into the compression section 12.
A ventilation fan 49 which is situated at the opposite end of the unit 10 (see
Baffles are also provided in the controls section 12, which have four functions;
The unit 10 may be provided with a remote monitoring facility. This enables the service schedules to be dynamic so that components are only replaced when they need to be, thus helping with environmental issues and product lifecycle costs. It also enables remote fault diagnosis that reduces down time of the compressor.
Set service schedules for consumable elements of the compressor can be eliminated, as all temperatures and pressures can be monitored remotely. Using this facility, it is possible to determine when components need changing or cleaning. A controller constantly monitors certain parameters and files of data can be extracted remotely. This data can be analysed to determine when to change filters or clean coolers.
The advantages of remote monitoring are as follows:
The design of the sub-base 22 and the design of the mounting arrangement means that the only component that needs to be supported during transportation is the compressor. The anti-vibration mounts 23 used for the sub-base 22 do not need any attachments to isolate movement during transportation, which makes transportation significantly easier.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0617112.8 | Aug 2006 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB2007/002751 | 7/19/2007 | WO | 00 | 2/24/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/025938 | 3/6/2008 | WO | A |
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20090324430 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |