The invention relates to heat exchangers, particularly for motor vehicles.
It relates more specifically to a heat exchanger of the type comprising an alternating stacking of first plates and second plates provided respectively with first corrugations and second corrugations so as to define, between the plates, first flow channels for a first fluid which alternate with second flow channels for a second fluid.
In a heat exchanger of this kind, the first plates and the second plates are provided with lined-up through-openings defining paths for allowing the first fluid to supply the first flow channels and the second fluid to supply the second flow channels.
This kind of heat exchanger is usually made by brazing together in a sealed assembly the respective raised edges of each of the plates.
Stacked-plate heat exchangers are used particularly as oil exchangers, for instance for cooling the engine oil or transmission oil of motor vehicles. They are also used for water condensers, in which a refrigerant is cooled by water, which is usually the engine cooling water.
The plates may come in different geometrical shapes, such as rectangular, and are usually provided with reliefs intended to be brazed to each other for mechanical strength. These reliefs also serve to interfere with the flow of the fluid and to increase the heat exchange area.
In most known versions, the plates used are identical or symmetrical. This means that the cross sectional areas of the first, flow channels and the second flow channels are identical.
It is also known practice, from EP 1 630 510, to provide stacked plates that allow for different cross sectional areas for the first and second flow channels, and hence for the two fluids that exchange heat with each other.
The above publication teaches for this purpose the provision of symmetrical plates having dissimilar corrugations, e.g. one large corrugation alternating with two small corrugations. However, in that known solution the small corrugations never pass through the neutral line of the plate, meaning the midplane of the plate. As a consequence, each small corrugation does not come into contact with another small corrugation, and the result is that the pressure resistance is provided only by the thickness of the plate. Since these plate heat exchangers can in certain applications be carrying fluids operating at high pressure, for example of the order of one hundred bar, they must be able to mechanically withstand such pressure values.
It is a particular object of the invention to overcome the abovementioned disadvantages.
It aims principally to provide a heat exchanger of the type indicated above that allows the respective cross sectional areas of the first and second. flow channels to be adapted to the two fluids employed, especially with regards their flowrates and their physical properties.
The invention also aims to provide a heat exchanger of the type indicated above that offers enhanced pressure resistance for each of the first and second flow channels due to an appropriate configuration of the corrugations.
To this end, the invention. provides a plate heat exchanger, as defined in the introduction, in which the first corrugations are separated by a first pitch P1 while the second corrugations are separated by a second pitch P2, which is different from the first pitch, thus allowing the first channels and the second channels to define a first cross sectional area and a second, different cross sectional area that are suitable for the first fluid and for the second fluid, respectively.
This suitability is thus decided by selecting appropriate values for the first pitch and the second pitch.
The first corrugations are in principle identical to each other and the same applies to the second corrugations. This avoids the need to make different corrugations within a given plate, as is required in the abovementioned publication EP 1 630 510.
Thus, through the selection of the values of the pitches P1 and P2, it is possible to make the cross sectional area of the first, channels and that of the second channels suitable for the first fluid and the second fluid, respectively, on the basis of the properties of these two fluids.
The pressure resistance of the first and second channels is ensured by having all the corrugations passed through the neutral line of the respective plates, notably by having the corrugations all on the same side of said neutral line.
In the following detailed description, which is given purely by way of example, reference is made to the appended drawings, in which:
The heat exchanger 10 shown in
The first plate 12 (
In the example, these first corrugations 16 propagate in a straight line parallel to a first direction D1 that extends obliquely relative to the sides of the rectangle defined by the base 32 of the plate. In
The base 32 is surrounded by a raised peripheral edge 34, in the form of a taper, to allow it to be assembled to corresponding raised edges on adjacent second plates, as will be seen below.
The base of the plate additionally includes two elevations 36 and 38 adjacent to one long side of the rectangle and containing respective openings 40 and 42. These two elevations are flat and raised above the plane defined by the base 32 of the plate. The base 32 has two other openings 44 and 46 adjacent to the other long side, these latter openings being formed directly in the base 32 of the plate. The openings 40, 42, 44 and 46 are circular.
The second plate 14 is made in a corresponding way. It has a flat base 48 defining a neutral line through which the second corrugations 18 pass. These corrugations propagate in a straight line parallel to a second direction D2 that extends obliquely relative to the sides of the rectangle defined by the base 48. The corrugations 18 are parallel to each other and spaced out at a second pitch P2 which is greater than the pitch P1.
As in the case of the first plate 12, the plate 14 is surrounded by a tapering raised peripheral edge 50 to allow mutual assembly of the plates by nesting and brazing their respective peripheral edges.
The corrugations of said first and second plates may for example be of identical height, that is a dimension in the direction perpendicular to the plane of extension of said plates. The nesting angle of said plates is thus the same for all the plates.
The height of said peripheral edges is decided as a function of the value of the nesting angle and the thickness of material of the plates in order to allow nesting with contact between the raised peripheral edges of adjacent plates when said plates are assembled. The height of the corrugations is adapted to ensure contact between one plate and the next without however limiting the nesting, so as to ensure a constant nesting angle.
The flat base 48 comprises two elevations 52 and 54 adjacent to one long side of the rectangle and provided with respective openings 56 and 58. The base 48 also includes two openings 60 and 62 formed adjacent to the other long side of the rectangle, these openings being made directly in the base 48. The openings 56, 58, 60 and 62 are circular. The pack made of the first plates, the second plates, and the end plates can be assembled by brazing in a single operation.
In this way a multiplicity of alternating channels is defined for the flow of the first fluid F1, which alternate with a multiplicity of channels for the flow of the fluid F2. The nozzle 24 is coaxial with the openings 40 and 60, which are aligned, to define an admission path. The nozzle 26 is coaxial with the openings 42 and 62, which are aligned, to define an admission path. The nozzle 28 is coaxial with the openings 46 and 58, which are aligned, to define an admission path. Lastly, the nozzle 30 is coaxial with the openings 44 and 56, which are aligned, to define an admission path.
In the stacking, the corrugations 16 of a first plate each intersect the corrugations 18 of the adjacent second plates, with the result that the first corrugations and the second corrugations intersect each other and come into contact with each other via their respective peaks. These peaks are brazed in the brazing operation, thus ensuring enhanced mechanical strength of the plates at pressure.
Because of the fact that the pitches P1 and P2 are different, the cross sectional areas defined by the first channels and the second channels are different and can be adapted by an appropriate selection of the values of the pitches P1 and P2. Advantageously, the ratio P1/P2 of the first pitch P1 to the second pitch P2 is between 1 and 6 with P1 P2. Advantageously, this ratio is a fraction, for example ½, ⅔, etc.
In the example of
The difference between the cross sectional areas of the flow channels will be explained further in the second embodiment shown in
In this second embodiment, parts corresponding to parts in the first embodiment are given the same reference numbers increased by 100.
The second plate 114 is not shown in perspective, but only in section in
As can be seen in the sectional view in
The view in section in
For example, in the case of a condenser traversed by a high pressure (typically 110 bar) refrigerant and by low-pressure (typically 1 to 2 bar) coolant water, the refrigerant will be passed through the smallest cross sectional area, which is the channels C2 (
In the surfaces SB1 of
However, in the case of
In the case of
Conversely, in the case of
The invention is open to numerous variant embodiments, particularly as regards the general shape of the plates, and the shape and respective pitches of the corrugations of the various plates.
The preferred application of the invention is to heat exchangers for motor vehicles, and particularly to condensers traversed by a refrigerant and cooled by water.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0802772 | May 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/056140 | 5/20/2009 | WO | 00 | 1/25/2011 |