The present disclosure relates to systems for recovering waste heat. More particularly, the present disclosure relates to organic Rankine cycle systems.
The Rankine cycle is a power generation cycle that converts thermal energy to mechanical work. The Rankine cycle is typically used in heat engines, and accomplishes the above conversion by bringing a working substance from a higher temperature state to a lower temperature state. The classical Rankine cycle is the fundamental thermodynamic process underlying the operation of a steam engine.
The Rankine cycle typically employs individual subsystems, such as a condenser, a fluid pump, a heat exchanger such as a boiler, and an expander turbine. The pump is frequently used to pressurize the working fluid that is received from the condenser as a liquid rather than a gas. The pressurized liquid from the pump is heated at the heat exchanger and used to drive the expander turbine so as to convert thermal energy into mechanical work. Upon exiting the expander turbine, the working fluid returns to the condenser where any remaining vapor is condensed. Thereafter, the condensed working fluid returns to the pump and the cycle is repeated.
A variation of the classical Rankine cycle is the Organic Rankine cycle (ORC), which is named for its use of an organic, high molecular mass fluid, with a liquid-vapor phase change, or boiling point, occurring at a lower temperature than the water-steam phase change. As such, in place of water and steam of the classical Rankine cycle, the working fluid in the ORC may be a solvent, such as n-pentane or toluene. The ORC working fluid allows Rankine cycle heat recovery from lower temperature sources such as biomass combustion, industrial waste heat, geothermal heat, solar ponds, etc. The low-temperature heat may then be converted into useful work, which may in turn be converted into electricity.
Further development in such Rankine cycle systems is desired.
One aspect of the present disclosure relates to a closed-loop organic Rankine cycle system including a Rankine cycle working circuit and a lubrication circuit. In certain examples, the Rankine cycle working circuit and the lubrication circuit have portions that coincide with one another. In certain examples, the Rankine cycle working circuit and the lubrication circuit share a common hydraulic pump. In certain examples, lubricant from the lubrication circuit and working fluid from the Rankine cycle working circuit are allowed to mix with each other. In certain examples, the lubrication circuit is a cooling circuit that cools lubricant used to lubricate and cool components (e.g. bearings, timing gears, etc.) of a mechanical expander that extracts energy/work from the Rankine cycle working circuit. In certain examples, lubricant from the lubrication circuit mixes with working fluid of the Rankine cycle working circuit and provides lubrication to a hydraulic pump that drives flow through both the Rankine cycle working circuit and the lubrication circuit.
Aspects of the present disclosure allow for a simplified Rankine cycle system having reduced sealing considerations and reduced pumping components. In certain examples, a separator is used to separate lubricant from the Rankine cycle working fluid before the Rankine cycle working fluid is delivered to a heat exchanger. In certain examples, the Rankine cycle system is used to re-capture energy from waste heat from a prime mover such as an internal combustion engine, a fuel cell, or a similar component. In certain examples, Rankine cycle system is used to re-capture energy from waste heat from the prime mover of a vehicle.
A variety of additional aspects will be set forth in the description that follows. These aspects can relate to individual features and to combinations of features. It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory only and are not restrictive of the broad concepts upon which the embodiments disclosed herein are based.
Referring to the drawings wherein like reference numbers correspond to like or similar components throughout the several figures.
The present disclosure relates generally to a Rankine cycle system (e.g., an organic Rankine cycle system) that utilizes heat from a heat source to generate useful work. In one example, the heat source is waste heat from a device such as a prime mover (e.g., an internal combustion engine such as a diesel engine or spark ignition engine, a fuel cell, etc.). In one example, a mechanical device, such as a rotary expander, is used to extract mechanical energy from the Rankine cycle system. In one example, the Rankine cycle system is an organic Rankine cycle system that heats and vaporizes the Rankine cycle working fluid (e.g., a solvent such as ethanol, n-pentane, toluene or other solvents) to temperatures that can equal or exceed 250 degrees Celsius (C).
Such high temperatures can deteriorate the lubricating oil used to lubricate moving components (e.g., bearings, gears, etc.) of mechanical devices (e.g., rotary expanders) used to extract energy from the Rankine cycle circuit. In this regard, with respect to flowable lubricating oils, it is desirable to use a lubrication cooling circuit that maintains the lubricant at acceptable temperatures. Grease typically is not effective because the solvent forming the Rankine cycle working fluid can cause de-greasing. Furthermore, grease will deteriorate at high temperatures. Lubricating oils can present issues when ineffective sealing (e.g., at mechanical components such as expanders, pumps or other components with moving parts that require lubrication) allows such oils to mix with the Rankine cycle working fluid. For example, lubricant within the Rankine cycle working fluid can be detrimental to the evaporation process by fouling the evaporator coils.
Aspects of the present disclosure relate to a closed-loop organic Rankine cycle system including a Rankine cycle working circuit and a lubrication circuit. In certain examples, the Rankine cycle working circuit and the lubrication circuit are configured such that lubricant from the lubrication circuit intentionally mixes with the Rankine cycle working fluid. In this way, the Rankine cycle working circuit and the lubrication circuit have portions that coincide with one another. In certain examples, the Rankine cycle working circuit and the lubrication circuit share a common hydraulic pump. In certain examples, the lubricant and the Rankine cycle working fluid mix at a location upstream from a low pressure side of the pump, and a separator separates the Rankine cycle working fluid from the lubricant at a location between a high pressure side of the pump and an evaporator. In certain examples, the lubrication circuit is a cooling circuit that cools lubricant used to lubricate components (e.g. bearings, timing gears, etc.) of a mechanical expander that extracts energy/work from the Rankine cycle working circuit, and lubricant from the lubrication circuit mixes with working fluid of the Rankine cycle working circuit and provides lubrication to a hydraulic pump that drives flow through both the Rankine cycle working circuit and the lubrication circuit. Patent Cooperation Treaty patent application publication WO 2014/117156 shows such a system, wherein the lubricant is mixed with the working fluid after being condensed to remove heat energy from the lubricant which was captured during expander component lubrication. WO '156 is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. In certain examples, the Rankine cycle system is used to capture energy from waste heat.
The Rankine cycle system 100 also includes a lubrication circuit 113 for cycling/circulating and cooling lubricant (e.g., castor oil, synthetic oil, other oils or lubricating material) used to lubricate moving parts associated with a mechanical component (e.g., a rotary expander) of the mechanical energy extracting zone 108. The Rankine cycle working circuit 102 and the lubrication circuit 113 include a shared segment 115 in which the Rankine cycle working fluid and the lubricant are mixed with each other. The Rankine cycle working circuit 102 and the lubrication circuit 113 are co-extensive along the shared segment 115 which feeds into the inlet 172 of a condenser 170. The condensed fluid is delivered from an outlet 174 of the condenser 170 to an inlet 162 of a fluid reservoir 160. The condenser 170 is preferably constructed such that lubricant cannot pool or become otherwise trapped within the condenser and can freely flow to the reservoir 160.
The pump 110 is positioned in fluid communication with the fluid reservoir 160 such that the mixture of Rankine cycle working fluid and lubricant flows from an outlet 164 of the reservoir 160 and through the pump 110 from the low pressure side 112 to the high pressure side 114. The lubricant within the mixture assists in lubricating the pump 110. The pump 110 provides positive pressure for cycling flow through both the Rankine cycle working circuit 102 and the lubrication circuit 113.
In the configuration shown at
In the configuration shown at
The fluid separator 119 is configured to separate the lubricant from the Rankine cycle working fluid. The Rankine cycle working circuit 102 includes a non-shared segment 121 that includes Rankine cycle working fluid without lubricant. The non-shared segment 121 extends from the separator 119, through the heating zone 106, and the mechanical energy extracting zone 108. The lubrication circuit 113 includes a non-shared segment 123 that extends from the separator 119 to the mechanical energy extracting zone 108. In one example, the non-shared segment 123 is provided with a control valve 155, such as a needle valve, for controlling the flow rate and/or pressure of the lubricant as it is introduced into the mechanical expander 127 at an inlet 190. Such control is desirable as the introduction of excess lubricant will increase and/or introduce parasitic losses by increases friction at the gears and/or bearings of the expander 127. As shown, the system 100 is configured such that the expander lubrication inlet 190 is above the lubrication outlet 526 of the separator 119 to prevent lubricant from completely draining from the separator 119 to the expander 127 when the system 100 is shut down. In one example, the lubrication outlet 526 is above the lubrication inlet 190 by a height, hl. In one example, the system 100 is configured such that the lowest part of the expander 127 is above the lubrication outlet 526. In one example, the non-shared segment 123 includes lubricant without Rankine cycle working fluid. At the mechanical energy extracting zone 108, the lubricant can flow through lubricant containing structures 125 such as bearings, bearing chambers, and gear chambers of a rotary mechanical expander 127. From the lubricant containment structures 125 (125a, 125b, 125c, 125d) of the mechanical energy extracting zone 108, the lubricant can flow to the primary mixing location 111 via segment 129.
In certain examples, Rankine cycle working fluid can leak past the shaft seals of expander 127 into the lubricant containment structures 125 such that the segment 129 carries a mixture of lubricant and Rankine cycle working fluid. In this example, the leakage of Rankine cycle working fluid into the lubrication circuit 113 at the mechanical expander 127 does not pose an issue for the system because of the ability to subsequently separate the lubricant from the Rankine cycle working fluid. Likewise, some of the Rankine cycle working fluid may migrate through seals in the expander 127 such that segment 131 carries a mixture of lubricant and Rankine cycle working fluid. Thus, special sealing used to absolutely prevent leakage is not needed thereby reducing the quantity and/or expense of the seals in the system.
In one example, the fluid separator 119 separates the Rankine cycle working fluid from the lubricant and directs the Rankine cycle working fluid to the non-shared segment 121 and the lubricant to the non-shared segment 123. Pressure from the pump 110 drives flow of the Rankine cycle working fluid through the non-shared segment 121 and also drives flow of lubricant through the non-shared segment 123. The mechanical expander 127 can include one or more rotor chambers 128 (128a, 128b, 128c) containing one or more rotors. In use, the heated Rankine cycle working fluid from the heating zone 106 flows through the rotor chambers 128 of the mechanical expander 127 causing rotation of the rotors such that useful work is extracted from the Rankine cycle circuit 102. For example, work can be extracted via an output shaft 400. At the rotary mechanical expander 127, some Rankine cycle working fluid may flow across seals from rotor chamber 128 to the lubricant containment structures 125. Thus, in some examples, a mixture of Rankine cycle working fluid and lubricant flows from the lubricant containment structures 125 through segment 129 to the primary mixing location 111. At the primary mixing zone 111, primary mixing between the lubricant and the Rankine cycle working fluid occurs. The mixed lubricant and Rankine cycle working fluid then flow from the mechanical primary mixing zone 111 through the condensing zone 104 and then to the reservoir where the mixture is stored. The mixture of Rankine cycle working fluid and lubricant flows through the pump 110 to the separator 119 from the reservoir outlet 164, which is located at a lower part of the reservoir 160 below a liquid level line 165 to ensure that only fully condensed fluid is introduced to the pump 110. Moreover, locating the reservoir outlet 164 at or near the bottom of the reservoir 160 ensures that any available lubricant is introduced back into the circuit. In some applications, the lubricant is only about 10% to about 20% of the total volume of the combined lubricant and the condensed Rankine cycle working fluid. The lubricant mixed with the Rankine cycle working fluid can assist in lubricating the pump 110.
By configuring the system 100 to mix the Rankine cycle working fluid and the lubricant upstream of the condenser 170, separate outlet pipes for each chamber 128 do not need to be tied together and routed to feed into the pump 110. Rather, the lubricant outlet ports simply need to be routed to the nearby expander outlet. This results in fewer leak paths and simplified packaging. Moreover, it is fully ensured that any working fluid that enters in the lubrication chambers 125 through the seals (e.g. turbo rings) is easily drained and returned back to the liquid state since both segments 129 and 131 feed into the condenser 170 after being mixed together at the primary mixing location 111.
In the depicted example, the Rankine cycle system 100 is configured to recapture waste energy from a prime mover, such as an engine 116 (e.g., an internal combustion engine such as a diesel or spark ignition engine or a fuel cell), by drawing waste heat from the engine (e.g., by drawing heat from the engine exhaust such as from a main exhaust line and/or from exhaust in an exhaust gas recirculation line). As depicted at
It will be appreciated that the engine 116 can be used to power a vehicle 300 (see
The separator inlet 522 can be provided with a conduit 528 that extends into the interior volume 521 of the separator 520 and directs the pumped fluid around the internal diameter of the separator to reduce the velocity of the mixture which accelerates the separation process. In one example, the conduit 528 is provided with a bent portion 528a for directing the fluid spray. The separator working fluid first outlet 524 can be provided with a plurality of converging inlet branches that extend from the outlet 524 into the interior volume 521 of the separator 500 to increase the velocity of the separated working fluid. As shown, two converging inlet branches 524a, 524b are provided. The separator lubricant second outlet 526 can be placed in fluid communication with the bottom of a funneled collection structure 534 which collects all lubricant to ensure that the outlet 526 is always subjected to a volume of lubricant. The separator 500 may also be provided with a diverter plate 536 within the interior volume 1 configured to minimize lubricant spray and to accelerate the separation process. In the example shown, the diverter plate 536 is provided with a toroid or doughnut shape with an open center. In one example, and as described in WO '156, the separator 500 can further include a filter or porous media to accelerate the separation process.
In this example, the mixture of lubricant (e.g., oil) and Rankine cycle working fluid (e.g., ethanol) can enter the oil separator 500 at the inlet 522 and flows into the interior volume 521 via conduit 528. In certain examples, the lubricant is heavier than the Rankine cycle working fluid and this weight difference allows the separator 500 to separate the lubricant from the Rankine cycle working fluid via gravity. For example within the housing 520, the lubricant sinks relative to the Rankine cycle working fluid. Thus, the Rankine cycle working fluid collects towards the top plate 530 of the housing 520 and the lubricant collects proximate the bottom plate 532 of the housing 520. The first outlet 524 is positioned at the top 528 of the housing 520 so as to receive the separated Rankine cycle working fluid while the second outlet 526 is positioned at a bottom 530 of the housing 520 so as to receive the separated lubricant. It is noted that the inlet and outlet positions can be relocated as necessary where the working fluid is more dense than the lubricant without departing from the concepts presented herein. The Rankine cycle working fluid exits the housing 520 through the first outlet 524 and flows through the first non-shared segment 121 to the heat exchanger 150. The lubricant exits the housing 520 through the second outlet 526 and flows through the second non-shared segment 123 to the lubricant containment structure 125 of the mechanical expander 127.
In the configuration shown at
As described above, the organic Rankine cycle system 100 of
In one example, the mechanical device used at the mechanical energy extracting zone 108 can include a Roots-style rotary device referred to herein as a Roots-style expander. Patent Cooperation Treaty patent application publication WO 2014/117159 discloses multi-stage expanders suitable for such use herein. The entirety of WO '159 is incorporated by reference herein. The pressure at the inlet side of the device is greater than the pressure at the outlet side of the device. The pressure drop between the inlet and outlet drives rotation within the device. Typically, except for decompression related to fluid leakage and device inefficiencies, expansion/decompression does not occur within the device itself, but instead occurs as the working fluid exits the device at the outlet. The device can be referred to a volumetric device since the device has a fixed displacement for each rotation of a rotor within the device.
As shown at
The expander housing 202 defines an internal cavity 208 (i.e., a rotor chamber) that provides fluid communication between the inlet 204 and the outlet 206. The internal cavity 208 is formed by first and second parallel rotor bores 210 (see
In use of the expander 200, working fluid (e.g., vaporized working fluid or two-phase working fluid) from the heating zone 106 enters the expander housing 202 through the inlet 204. Upon passing through the inlet 204, the vaporized working fluid enters one of the fluid transfer volumes 219 defined between the lobes 214 of one of the rotors 212. The pressure differential across the expander 200 causes the working fluid to turn the rotor 212 about its axis of rotation 213 such that the fluid transfer volume 219 containing the vaporized working fluid moves circumferentially around the bore-defining surface 222 from the inlet 204 to the outlet 206. As the rotors 212 are rotated by the working fluid, mechanical energy is transferred out from the expander 200 through the output shaft 400 which coincides with one of the shafts 216. The output shaft 400 (
It will be appreciated that working fluid from the inlet 204 enters the internal cavity 208 of the housing 202 (see arrows 228 at
The intermeshing gears 218 and bearings 217 can be positioned within a lubrication chamber 402 containing lubricant for lubricating the gears 218 and the bearings 217 (see
In the diagram of
From stage 142-2 the Rankine cycle working fluid is transferred to stage 142-3. During stage 142-3, the pressurized Rankine cycle working fluid enters and passes through the heat exchanger 150 where it is heated at constant pressure by an external heat source to become a vapor or a two-phase fluid, (i.e., liquid together with vapor). During stage 142-4, the Rankine cycle working fluid, in the form of a fully vaporized fluid or a two-phase fluid, passes through the mechanical energy extracting zone 108, thereby generating useful work or power. The working fluid may expand at the outlet of the mechanical energy extracting zone 108 thereby decreasing the temperature and pressure of the working fluid such that some additional condensation of the working fluid may occur. Following stage 142-4, the working fluid is returned to the condensing zone 104, at which point the cycle completes and will typically restart at stage 142-1.
From the forgoing detailed description, it will be evident that modifications and variations can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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3611/DEL/2014 | Dec 2014 | IN | national |
This application is a continuation-in-part of and claims priority to Patent Cooperation Treaty International Application Number PCT/US2014/013397, filed on Jan. 28, 2014. This application also claims priority to U.S. Provisional patent application No. 61/757,533, filed on Jan. 28, 2013 and to India Provisional patent application number 3611/DEL/2014, filed on Sep. 12, 2014. The entireties of U.S. 61/757,533, India 3611/DEL/2014 and PCT/US2014/013397 are incorporated by reference herein.
This invention was made with government support under Contract No. DE-EE0005650 awarded by the National Energy Technology Laboratory funded by the Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy of the United States Department of Energy. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61757533 | Jan 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US2014/013397 | Jan 2014 | US |
Child | 14811276 | US |