Process for producing a tube sheet

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 5158729
  • Patent Number
    5,158,729
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, October 31, 1990
    34 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, October 27, 1992
    32 years ago
Abstract
In a process for fabricating an injection-molded tube sheet of thermoplastic material, for use in an apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass, with at least 25 through-holes for taking up tube ends, a melt is first distributed in the injection mold over the entire cross-sectional area before being pressed into the region of the mold where the tube sheet proper is formed. The injection mold has a needle disposed therein for each hole of the tube sheet being fabricated. After cooling, the portion of the thermoplastic melt without through holes, that is that overlaying the needles, is removed to produce the tube sheet.
Description

TECHNICAL FIELD
The invention relates to an injection-molded tube sheet of thermoplastic material for apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass. The invention also relates to the fabrication of apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass using such a tube sheet. The invention also relates to a process for fabrication of such tube sheets.
BACKGROUND
In the fabrication of apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass that contain a relatively large number of tubes, tube sheets are usually used that have through-holes into which the tube ends are threaded and connected with the tube sheet. Various processes to arrange the tube ends as compactly as possible, especially in the tube sheet zone, have been developed. The closer together the tube ends are arranged, the more difficult it becomes to connect the tube ends with the tube sheet in such a manner that a leaktight connection is ensured even under relatively high pressures.
For leaktight connection of tube ends that are arranged as compactly as possible in heat exchangers containing tubes having no or only little porosity, a process has been developed in which the tube ends are placed tightly against each other and are connected to each other by radiant heat (West German Laid-open Application 3,614,339). For somewhat less compactly arranged tube ends for apparatuses for transferring heat and/or mass, a connection between the tube ends can also be achieved by means of radiant heat by threading each tube end into a sleeve and placing the sleeves close together (West German Laid-open Application 3,614,342).
Especially for the latter apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass (West German Laid-open Application 3,614,342), very much positioning work is necessary in the fabrication thereof, because both the sleeves and tube ends must be held in position during the radiant-heat treatment. For better handling, it would be favorable first to connect all sleeves with each other before the tube ends are positioned in the connected sleeves. It would be even more favorable to be able to fabricate a molded shape that resembles sleeves connected with each other. In this case, however, care is to be taken that the minimum web width between neighboring holes of the tube sheet, which width in the case of circular holes lies on an imaginary connecting line between the centers of these neighboring holes, corresponds in order of magnitude to the wall thickness of the tube ends, in order to achieve uniform melting of tube sheet and tube ends during heat transfer by radiant heat. A leaktight connection between tube sheet and tube ends is achieved only by uniform melting of tube sheet and tube ends.
Since tubes with an outside diameter of 3 mm and a wall thickness of 0.4 mm or less are usually used in such apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass, the minimum web width between neighboring holes must also be at most 0.4 mm. Especially when 25 tubes or more (up to several thousand) are used in a single apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass, it has been impossible heretofore to fabricate a molded shape with such small minimum web widths and such small cross-sectional dimensions for the through-holes from thermoplastic material using injection molding.
Injection molding is known to relate to processes in which thermoplastic material is introduced into an injection mold and cooled under pressure. The needles necessary in the injection mold to obtain the through-holes are not stable, because of the small cross-sectional dimension (3 mm diameter or less), and they deform because of the melt flowing between them, so that the maintenance of exact web widths is not possible and the holes even coalesce to some extent. Especially for tube sheets with 25 holes and more, it cannot be guaranteed that the melt will completely fill the injection mold in the case of these small web widths.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object of the invention is to provide an injection-molded tube sheet of thermoplastic material for apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass with at least 25 through-holes for receiving tube ends, which tube sheet guarantees a compact arrangement of the tube ends and at the same time greatly reduces the work expenditure for the fabrication of heat exchangers. Another object of the present invention is to provide a process for the fabrication of such tube sheets.
These and other objects are achieved by an injection-molded tube sheet of thermoplastic material for apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass with at least 25 through-holes for receiving tube ends, wherein the holes have a hydraulic diameter of at most 3 mm and wherein a minimum wall thickness of at most 0.4 mm is present between neighboring holes.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will be explained in more detail by reference to the following figures, in which:
FIG. 1 shows a top view of a segment of a tube sheet according to the invention;
FIG. 2 shows section A--A of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 shows a schematic cross-section of a mold for producing the tube sheet;
FIG. 4 shows a cross-section of the product produced by the mold of FIG. 3.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The hydraulic diameter d.sub.h is defined as the quotient of four times the internal cross-sectional area of the holes divided by the inside circumference (see Dubbel, Taschenbuch fuer Maschinenbau (Pocketbook for Mechanical Engineering), 23rd Edition, 1970, page 314, paragraph 4): ##EQU1##
In the case of holes with circular cross section, the hydraulic diameter dh is equal to the diameter of those holes. The concept of hydraulic diameter was chosen because holes with noncircular cross sections (e.g., elliptical, rectangular, etc.) can also be necessary if tubes with corresponding outside cross sections are used.
The minimum web width between neighboring holes is defined as the shortest distance between the walls of neighboring holes.
Preferably, the holes of the injection-molded tube sheet have a hydraulic diameter of at most 2 mm, especially of at most 1.7 mm. To achieve a compact arrangement, such a tube sheet has a minimum web width of at most 0.3 mm, preferably about 0.2 mm.
The tube sheet thickness is preferably between 3 and 10 mm, a thickness of 5 to 8 mm having proved favorable in terms of manufacture and stability of the tube sheet.
The tube sheets according to the invention are used preferably for the fabrication of apparatus for transferring heat and/or mass, these being suitable for use both for crossflow filtration and for dead-end filtration. For dead-end filtration, the tube ends can be connected at both ends with one tube sheet per end, one of the tube sheets being closed. A tube sheet in which, as described hereinafter with regard to the fabrication process, the layer formed because of the cross-sectional distribution of the melt is not cut off is particularly suitable for this purpose. The tubes for dead-end filtration can also be connected at only one end with a tube sheet according to the invention, the free ends of the tubes then being closed, for example by heat sealing. The tubes for dead-end filtration can also be bent to U-shape, each of the two ends being inserted in different holes of a single tube sheet and connected with the tube sheet.
The present invention also comprises a process for fabrication of the described tube sheet by feeding a melt of thermoplastic material into an injection mold 5, a needle 16 being disposed in the injection mold for each through hole of the tube sheet to be fabricated. The melt is first distributed over substantially the entire cross-sectional area before being pressed into the region 15 of the needles 16. The layer or disk 21 formed because of the cross-sectional distribution is cut off along line C--C after cooling.
For the cross-sectional distribution of the melt, it is unexpectedly sufficient for a free space 10 of a few millimeters to be present above the needles 16 in the injection mold, which essentially extends over the tube sheet cross section. Under these conditions the melt first fills this free space 10 because of the lower flow resistance, and thereafter flows between the needles 16 essentially in the direction of the needles 16, so that a greatly reduced transverse loading of the needles 16 is obtained.
The use of thermoplastic plastics such as PVDP has proved best for the process according to the invention.
For clarity, FIGS. 1 and 2 show only one segment of one tube sheet according to the invention, the segment being shown in greatly enlarged form for illustrative purposes. The symbols 1 denote the tube sheet and 2 the through-holes of the tube sheet. For explanatory purposes, the minimum web width has been denoted by s and the thickness of the tube sheet by D in the figures. In the preferred embodiment of the claimed tube sheet, the hydraulic diameter of the through-holes is at most 3 mm, preferably at most 2 mm, the minimum web width s is at most 0.4 mm, preferably at most 0.3 mm or 0.2 mm, and the thickness D of the tube sheet 1 is between 3 and 10 mm, preferably between 5 and 8 mm.
Claims
  • 1. A process for producing a tube sheet having a plurality of through-holes for taking up tube ends for an apparatus for transferring at least one of heat and mass, comprising the steps of:
  • feeding a melt of thermoplastic material into a first region of an injection mold which contains in a second region of said injection mold a needle for each through-hole of said tube sheet to distribute said melt over substantially an entire cross-sectional area of said injection mold;
  • pressing said melt of thermoplastic material from said first region into said second region of said injection mold containing said needles to form an intermediate product having a second portion with openings formed by said needles therein and a solid first portion formed across the entire cross-sectional area of said injection mold;
  • cooling said intermediate product; and
  • cutting off said solid first portion of said intermediate product formed across the entire cross-sectional area of said injection mold to obtain said tube sheet comprising said second portion of said intermediate product having through-holes therein.
  • 2. A process according to claim 1, wherein said mold contains at least twenty-five said needles.
  • 3. A process according to claim 1, wherein said needles are arranged such that said through-holes have a hydraulic diameter of at most 3 millimeters and a minimum web width between neighboring holes of at most 0.4 millimeters.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
3806517 Mar 1988 DEX
Parent Case Info

This is a division of application Ser. No. 07/317,522 filed Mar. 1, 1989 which issued as U.S. Pat. No. 4,984,630 on Jan. 15, 1991.

US Referenced Citations (7)
Number Name Date Kind
2883704 Jurgeleit Apr 1959
3228876 Mahon Jan 1966
3459622 Fisher Aug 1969
3751545 Peeso, Jr. et al. Aug 1973
4588543 Huebner May 1986
4740344 Wollbeck et al. Apr 1988
4790372 Gemeinhardt et al. Dec 1988
Foreign Referenced Citations (10)
Number Date Country
1988637 Apr 1968 DEX
3124216 Dec 1982 DEX
3418201 Nov 1985 DEX
3636177 Jun 1987 DEX
3614339 Oct 1987 DEX
3614342 Oct 1987 DEX
37-1897 May 1962 JPX
59-109752 Jun 1984 JPX
1107843 Mar 1968 GBX
1141102 Jan 1969 GBX
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
J. D. Robinson, "Gating and Cooling Techniques for Polypropylene" Plastics, Aug., 1965, pp. 47-51.
Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 317522 Mar 1989