The present invention relates to a heat exchanger plate, to a heat exchanger shell and to a heat exchanger assembly. Furthermore, the invention relates to a method of manufacturing a heat exchanger plate.
A conventional plate type heat exchanger generally consists of a plurality of heat exchanger plates, between which fluid streams with a different temperature are allowed to flow in a spatially separated manner. This enables the recovery of heat energy by means of the heat exchanged between the fluids.
From European patent document EP 1,842,616, a method for manufacturing a plate type heat exchanger is known. The resulting heat exchanger comprises a plurality of stacked heat exchanger plates formed from rectangular plate members. Each heat exchanger plate has flanges formed in the periphery of the plate. The flanges comprise flat portions on two opposing edges of the plate, which are bent towards one side of the plate, and bulge portions at the remaining opposing edges of the plate, which are bent toward the other side of the plate. Two heat exchanger plates are connected facing each other with one plate positioned upside down. In an alternating fashion, the flat portions or the bulge portions of adjacent plates constitute contacting surfaces. In this way, gap portions with openings are formed in between the plates, allowing for the fluids to exchange heat while flowing through these gap portions. It can be observed that for the combined heat exchanger plates in EP 1,842,616, a first gap portion or fluid channel is formed having first openings or fluid channel apertures with a hexagonal shape. A similar heat exchanger configuration with hexagonal fluid channel apertures is described in patent document US 2004/0080060.
The disadvantage of the known heat exchangers is that the corners of the irregularly shaped fluid channels of such a heat exchanger introduce undesired obstructions to the flowing fluid in the side corners of the fluid channels, representing a source of turbulence and an increased resistance to the flow. Furthermore, the corner geometry is complex, requiring additional sealing items, and is expensive to fabricate.
It is an object to provide a heat exchanger plate, such that a pair of these plates is combinable into a heat exchanger shell with a fluid channel aperture having improved connectivity and reduced turbulence properties.
According to an aspect, there is provided a heat exchanger plate, formed from a quadrilateral plate having a pair of opposing first plate edges and a pair of opposing second plate edges, the heat exchanger plate having first surface portions each along a first middle edge portion of a first plate edge, each first surface portion comprising a first contacting region, the heat exchanger plate having second surface portions each along a second middle edge portion of a second plate edge, each second surface portion comprising a second contacting region, whereby the first surface portions are bent to a first side of the quadrilateral plate resulting in a first partial fluid channel, and the second surface portions are bent to a second side of the quadrilateral plate resulting in a second partial fluid channel, whereby the first contacting regions are coplanar defining a plane, and whereby the heat exchanger plate comprises corner surface portions comprising a first corner edge portion and a second corner edge portion, wherein at least two corner surface portions are bent inward with respect to the first partial fluid channel such that the respective first corner edge portions are in the plane, while the respective second corner edge portions are substantially perpendicular to the plane.
In addition and according to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of manufacturing such a heat exchanger plate.
The “substantially perpendicular” quality of the respective second corner edge portions indicates that such second corner edge portion is oriented at an angle of substantially 90° with respect to the plane defined by the coplanar first contacting regions.
Advantageously, by joining two such heat exchanger plates with folded corner surface portions into a heat exchanger shell, with one plate upside down and the plates facing each other, a first fluid channel is formed having first fluid channel apertures with a regular quadrilateral or even rectangular shape. A stacking of such heat exchanger shells yields a heat exchanger assembly with first and second fluid channels, in which the first fluid channel apertures are regularly shaped, representing an entrance for supplied fluid flow that is unobstructed and that can be easily fitted to the fluid supply and discharge channels.
According to an embodiment, the heat exchanger plate is formed from a rectangular plate, having a second partial fluid channel that is substantially perpendicular to the first partial fluid channel.
The resulting heat exchanger plate, shell and assembly are highly symmetrical and therefore easy to manufacture.
According to another embodiment, at least one of the first surface portions comprises a first flange near the corresponding first middle edge portion. This first flange includes the first contacting region.
According to a further embodiment, at least one second surface portion comprises a second flange near the corresponding second middle edge portion. This second flange includes the second contacting region
These first and second contacting regions of the first and second flange present more substantial contact surfaces for connecting adjacent heat exchanger plates.
According to a further embodiment, a first flange portion of the first flange is bent with respect to the plane S.
The provision of receding flange portions results in a crevice between the contacting first surfaces of heat exchanger plates situated along these flange portions, presenting an accessible region for connecting and/or sealing the heat exchanger plates, for example by brazing or welding.
In a further embodiment, the cross section of at least one of the first and second partial fluid channels varies along the at least one of the first and second partial fluid channels.
By varying the cross sections of the channels along their length, it is possible to adjust the temperature distribution inside the heat exchanger in such a way as to improve the heat transfer efficiency between the heat exchanging fluids flowing through the channels.
According to further aspects of the invention, a plate type heat exchanger shell and a plate type heat exchanger assembly are provided. The heat exchanger shell comprises a pair of heat exchanger plates as described above, in which the heat exchanger plates are connected along the first contacting regions, the first partial fluid channels of the respective heat exchanger plates forming a first fluid channel. The provided plate type heat exchanger assembly comprises a plurality of heat exchanger shells as described above, in which heat exchanger shells are connected along the second contacting regions, such that one of the second partial fluid channels of a first heat exchanger shell combines with one of the second partial fluid channels of a second heat exchanger shell into a second fluid channel.
Embodiments will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying schematic drawings in which corresponding reference symbols indicate corresponding parts, and in which:
The figures are only meant for illustrative purposes, and do not serve as restriction of the scope or the protection as laid down by the claims.
This invention relates to heat exchangers and to a method of manufacturing heat exchanger plates forming a heat exchanger shell or assembly. Plate type heat exchangers may be formed of a plurality of heat exchanger plates having bent or folded surface portions. The “bending” and “folding” of surfaces should be broadly interpreted here, not only referring to a sharply defined crease along a line on this surface, but also to a more gradually curved surface region.
We turn now to a more detailed discussion of the figures.
Alternatively, the heat exchanger assembly 102 can be viewed as being composed of heat exchanger shells 104, which are formed out of pairs of adjacent heat exchanger plates 106. The heat exchanger plates 106 are positioned in an abutting manner; with one of the plates positioned upside down with respect to the other plate. The heat exchanger shell 104 may represent a separate article of manufacture, and is further explained with reference to
The heat exchanger assembly 102 shown in
In the embodiment shown in
Corner surface portions 224 are located in the remaining regions along the first and second plate edges 220, 222 that are next to the first and second surface portions 210, 212. The plate edge portions bordering a corner surface portion are referred to as a first corner edge portion 226 and a second corner edge portion 228, both being continuations of the first and second middle edge portions 221, 223 respectively.
The remaining region of the rectangular plate, not covered by the surface and/or corner portions 210, 212, 224, is referred to as the main surface portion 218.
The heat exchanger plates 106 may be manufactured from metallic sheet materials, e.g. carbon steel or alloy steel, with sufficient ductility to allow the forming as described. In order to have some margin while shaping the heat exchanger plates 106, it is preferable that the construction material also allows for a certain amount of irreversible deformation during the forming process. Materials commonly used in manufacturing the plates may allow for plastic deformations of up to 10%-30%.
In addition, the second surface portions 212 are bent to the second side 208 of the rectangular plate 204, yielding a second groove or second partial fluid channel 232 on the second side 208. This second partial fluid channel 232 is bounded by the main surface portion 218 and the bent second surface portions 212.
Each first and second surface portion 210, 212 of a heat exchanger plate 106 has a corresponding first or second contacting region 214, 216 representing a line or surface patch suitable for joining with a similar contact region of a second heat exchanger plate. In the example shown in
A finalized heat exchanger plate 106 has first contacting regions 214 that are coplanar, defining a plane S. This plane S establishes a reference with respect to which the measures for obtaining regularly shaped first fluid channel apertures 112 can be clearly defined.
The corner surface portions 224 of the finalized heat exchanger plate 106 are bent inward with respect to the first partial fluid channel 230, such that the first corner edge portions 226 are mainly in the plane S. The second corner edge portions 228 in the finalized heat exchanger plate 106 are substantially perpendicular to the plane S.
The substantially perpendicular quality of the respective second corner edge portions 228 implies that the second corner edge portion 228 is oriented at a corner edge angle δ of approximately 90° with respect to the plane S defined by the coplanar first contacting regions 214, i.e. that the second corner edge portion 228 is parallel to a normal vector of the plane S. The perpendicular corner edge angle δ is shown in
This perpendicular character is subject to manufacturing tolerances, which may be in the range of 5-10%, but are preferably smaller than 5%.
A deviation dδ from perpendicularity for a selected corner edge portion of a selected heat exchanger plate will require manufacturing of an abutting heat exchanger plate having an adjoining corner edge portion with a complementary deviation from the normal, in order for the selected corner edge portion and the adjoining corner edge portion to be in line, and for first fluid channel aperture 112 to remain regular quadrilateral in shape. In other words, if the deviation dδ for the selected corner edge portion results in a corner edge angle δ=90°+dδ, then the adjoining corner edge angle equals 90°−dδ. If this complementarity is not obeyed, then the first fluid channel aperture 112 of the heat exchanger shell 104 formed by the abutting heat exchanger plates 106 will obtain an undesirable non-quadrilateral (e.g. a hexagonal) shape. Preferably, the deviation do equals 0°.
In the embodiment shown in
Furthermore, in this embodiment the bent first and second surface portions 210, 212 are created by folding along corresponding first and second folding lines 229, 231 in the plane of the rectangular plate 204. This first folding line 229 is located in between the first surface portion 210 and the main surface portion 218, while the second folding line 231 is located between the second surface portion 212 and the main surface portion 218.
The geometry of the resulting folded heat exchanger plate shown in
According to alternative embodiments, the first surface portions 210 may be flat folded surface patches perpendicular to the plane S or may be curvedly bent regions. In the latter case, the additional folding line 233 and diagonal folding line 234 are not required.
The heat exchanger plate 106 may have a second partial fluid channel 232 that is substantially perpendicular to the first partial fluid channel 230. This perpendicular property may be present irrespective of the geometry, which may be folded and polygonal as in
As was already mentioned, the heat exchanger plates 106 may also be constructed of plates having a non-rectangular quadrilateral shape. The first and second partial fluid channels 230, 232 are not required to be perpendicular in this case. The asymmetric quadrilateral plate configuration is only subject to the restriction that the first contacting regions 214 still span the plane S.
The first flange 304 may be present along the entire first plate edge 220, that means along both the first middle edge portion 221 and the first corner edge portions 226, as shown in
Alternatively or in addition to the first flange 304, at least one of the second surface portions 212 of the flanged heat exchanger plate 302 may have a second flange 306 near the corresponding second middle edge portion 223.
According to an embodiment, the heat exchanger plate 106 may have an essentially flat first surface portion 210 that is tilted at a second angle β with respect to the plane S. This second angle β may be in the range 0°<β≦135°. The case β=90° represents a first surface portion 210 that is perpendicular to the plane S. The unrealistic value β=0° represent an asymptotic limit, resulting in a first fluid channel 108 with vanishing height and a lack of spacing between the main surface portions 218, 218′ of adjacent heat exchanger plates 106, 106′. For the cases β<90° shown in
Alternatively, a heat exchanger plate 106 may have first and/or second surface portions 210, 212 that are curvedly bent, as is explained with reference to
As is shown in
The selected shape of a first surface portion 210 dictates the geometric transition from this first surface portion 210 to the folded corner surface portion 224 of a heat exchanger plate 106, 302. The transition may be gradually curved or it may be more like the polygonal heat exchanger plate configuration as shown in
Moreover, it is possible for two abutting heat exchanger plates to have different shapes.
Connecting and sealing of the first and second contacting regions 214, 216 may be achieved by conventional methods, such as welding and brazing. Known welding methods which are shown here yield a fillet weld 502, a plasma or electric resistance weld 504 (
It is furthermore known that the welding quality can be improved by removing some plate material from contacting regions 214, 216, such as to form a welding groove along these contacting regions. As illustrated in
A pair of adjacent heat exchanger plates 106, 302 may be provided with an edge clamp 512 or a flow guiding element 514, as is shown in
For heat exchanger plates 106, 302 that are welded together, a flow guiding element 514 is not required to have a high mechanical stiffness, as the main purpose of the flow guiding element 514 will be to guide the flow into the fluid channels 108, 110.
For non-welded heat exchanger plates 106, 302 it may be desired to apply edge clamps 512 or more rigid flow guiding elements 514. In the latter case, an additional function of the flow guiding element 514 is to hold the plates together and to prevent leakage from and into the fluid channels 108, 110. This is shown in
Although not illustrated in the figures, the second surface portions 212 may also be curved analogously to the illustrations in
Multiple flow guiding elements 514 may be installed on the available first surface portions 210 in this way. Alternatively or in addition, one or more flow guiding elements 514 may be provided on an adjoining pair of second surface portions 212′, 212″ of two adjacent flanged heat exchanger plates 302′, 302″.
The flow guiding element 514 may be an ordinary flow guide, which guides the fluid flow into or out of the fluid channels 108, 110 while reducing the flow separation.
Alternatively, the flow guiding element 514 may be a ferrule 606, which is a thin curved plate enveloping a pair of adjacent surface portions 210, 210′ or 212′, 212″, preferably provided on the inlet first or second fluid channel apertures 112,114. This ferrule 606 near the inlet fluid channel apertures 112,114 extends a certain distance into the inlet fluid channel apertures 112,114. A thermally insulating gap filled with stagnant fluid found within the respective fluid channel may be provided between the ferrule 606 and the main surface portions 218 of the flanged heat exchanger plates 302, in order to protect the main surface portions and fluid channel apertures from direct contact with the fluid entering the fluid channels. Additionally, this thermally insulating gap may be filled with an insulating material 610, such as ceramic fibre paper, in order to increase the insulation efficiency. This prevents surfaces and edges to be excessively cooled or heated due to the incoming fluid flow.
Also, the flow guiding element 514 may be a convergent nozzle (not shown), which is also attachable near the inlet fluid channel apertures and extending a certain distance into the fluid channels. Furthermore, the nozzle wall converging into the fluid channel is able to generate a jet from the incoming fluid stream.
In summary, any of these flow guiding elements 514 may be provided on at least one of an adjoining pair of first surface portions 210, 210′ and an adjoining pair of second surface portions 212′, 212″ of two adjacent heat exchanger plates.
In
A plane defined by the rectangular first fluid channel aperture 712 is slanted with respect to the irregular first fluid channel 710, instead of being perpendicular as was shown in
Alternatively or in addition, the irregular first fluid channel 710 may be given a varying cross section along its length in an analogous way. Even more, the dimensions of the cross section of an irregular second fluid channel 714 may vary along its length. Such variation of the dimensions along the irregular fluid channels 710, 714 may be used to correct for unfavourable temperature distributions within the heat exchanging fluids.
Besides varying the dimensions of the surface portions 704-708 along the corresponding partial fluid passages, the variation of dimensions of the channel cross sections may also be achieved by varying the curvature of the first and/or second surface portions 706-708 along the same fluid channels. In general, fluid channels may be created with converging, diverging or otherwise non-uniform cross sections along their lengths.
According to an aspect, a method for manufacturing a heat exchanger plate 106 is provided. In general, the heat exchanger plate is manufactured from a quadrilateral plate 202 having a pair of opposing first plate edges 220 and a pair of opposing second plate edges 222. The method comprises bending of first surface portions 210, each of which is located along a first middle edge portion 221 of a first plate edge 220, to a first side of the quadrilateral plate 202. This yields a first groove or first partial fluid channel 230. Consequently, each first surface portion 210 will have a first contacting region 214. The method further comprises bending of second surface portions 212, each of which is located along a second middle edge portion 223 of a second plate edge 222, to a second side of the quadrilateral plate 202. This will result in a second groove or second partial fluid channel 232 and in each second surface portion 212 obtaining a second contacting region 216. After these bending operations, the first contacting regions are coplanar and jointly define a plane S. The heat exchanger plate 106 has four corner surface portions 224 each comprising a first corner edge portion 226 and a second corner edge portion 228. The method is characterized by the fact that at least two corner surface portions 224 are bent inward with respect to the first partial fluid channel 230 such that the respective first corner edge portion 226 will end up in the plane S, while the respective second corner edge portions 228 will end up being substantially perpendicular to the plane S.
According to an embodiment, the bending of at least one of the first surface portions 210 further results in this first surface portion being tilted at an angle β with respect to the plane S. This angle may be in the range 0°<β≦135°. In addition, at least one of the at least two corner surface portions 224 may be bent along an additional folding line 234 connecting the respective first corner edge portion 226 and the second corner edge portion 228.
According to an embodiment, at least one first middle edge portion 221 of the quadrilateral plate 202 is bent to the first side 206 of the heat exchanger plate 106, resulting in at least one first contacting region 214 coinciding with the respective first middle edge portion 221.
According to another embodiment, at least one first surface portion 210 of the quadrilateral plate 202 comprises a first flange 304 near the corresponding first middle edge portion 221. After bending of the first surface portion 210 to the first side 206 of the heat exchanger plate 106, the first flange 304 is also bent. At least a portion of the first flange 304 will lie in the plane S and will include the first contacting region 214.
According to another embodiment, at least one second surface portion 212 of the quadrilateral plate 202 comprises a second flange 306 near the corresponding second middle edge portion 223. After bending of the second surface portion 212 to the second side 208 of the heat exchanger plate 106, the second flange 306 is also bent. At least a portion of the second flange 306 will include the second contacting region 216.
The descriptions above are intended to be illustrative, not limiting. It will be apparent to the person skilled in the art that alternative and equivalent embodiments of the invention can be conceived and reduced to practice, without departing from the scope of the claims set out below.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003983 | Dec 2009 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NL2010/050858 | 12/17/2010 | WO | 00 | 7/24/2012 |
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WO2011/074963 | 6/23/2011 | WO | A |
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