Claims
- 1. A fan for moving air comprising:
- a motor, a propeller coupled to the motor to be driven by the motor into rotation about an axis, said propeller having a plurality of blades having an axial span along the axis;
- a ringcage structure mounted around the propeller, said ringcage structure including a plurality of axially-spaced rings with an annular aperture between said rings, at least one of said rings being within the axial span of the propeller blades and another of said rings being located downstream of said one ring; said rings being so axially spaced from each other and being so selected to provide an air flow augmentation through said aperture from a conversion of propeller generated tip vortices so as to augment the air flow from the propeller.
- 2. The fan as claimed in claim 1 wherein a plurality of rings are located within the axial span of said propeller blades.
- 3. The fan as claimed in claim 2 wherein a plurality of said annular apertures for air flow augmentation are located within the axial span of said propeller blades.
- 4. The fan as claimed in claim 1 wherein said rings have a ring chord dimension and wherein the ring chord dimension and the axial spacing between said one ring and an axially-successive ring are selected to provide said flow augmentation.
- 5. The fan as claimed in claim 4 wherein the ring chord dimension is in the range between about 10% to about 50% of the radius of the propeller.
- 6. The fan as claimed in claim 5 wherein the spacing between at least said one ring and an axially-successive ring is selected in the range from about one-half to about four ring chord dimensions.
- 7. The fan as claimed in claim 4 wherein the ring chord dimension, said axial spacing, and said propeller are selected to provide a static pressure versus mass flow curve that is substantially straight.
- 8. The fan as claimed in claim 7 wherein said propeller blades have a relatively low-aspect-ratio.
- 9. The fan as claimed in claim 8 wherein the propeller blades have an aspect ratio in the range from about 0.1 to about 3.
- 10. The fan as claimed in claim 9 wherein the propeller has a solidity ratio in the range from about 0.6 to about 3.
- 11. The fan as claimed in claim 10 wherein at least one of said rings is inclined at a desired angle relative to the rotational axis.
- 12. The fan as claimed in claim 9 wherein the rings forming said annular aperture have cross-sectional airfoil shapes with an airfoil surface facing upstream of said air flow.
- 13. The fan as claimed in claim 12 wherein the ring airfoil surfaces each have a normally blunt leading edge and a normally thick trailing edge, with said blunt leading edge being inboard and said thin trailing edge being outboard, so that airflow from said tip vortices moves from the trailing edges across the airfoil surfaces towards the blunt leading edges.
- 14. The fan as claimed in claim 1 wherein said propeller blades have radial tips which are spaced from said one ring by a clearance s whose size is in the range from about 3% to about 10% of the radius of a propeller blade.
- 15. An axial flow propeller fan for moving gas comprising:
- an axial flow propeller for rotation about an axis and having a plurality of radially-extending blades; said blades being oriented with an axial span selected to move said gas in a downstream direction along the axis during blade rotation;
- a ring cage structure formed of a plurality of axially-spaced gas flow enhancing rings located around the axis, with a plurality of said gas flow enhancing rings being axially-located around the blades within their axial spans;
- said propeller blades having tips which generate tip vortices during rotation with the shape of the blades being selected to strengthen the tip vortices; the blade tips and the radially-inner edge of said gas flow enhancing rings being in sufficiently close proximity and with dimension of said axial gas flow enhancing rings and their axial spacings being selected to form apertures through which tip vortices from the blades augment the gas flow in said downstream direction;
- whereby tip vortices can be converted to useful gas flow for enhanced performance of the axial flow propeller system.
- 16. The axial flow propeller system as claimed in claim 15 wherein the rings have a ring chord C which is less than about 59% of the radius R of the propeller and wherein the radial clearance between the tips of the propeller blades and inner edges of said gas flow enhancing rings is less than about 10% of said Radius R and the axial distance between rings is in the range from about one half to about four ring chords C.
- 17. An apparatus for enhancing the mass gas flow from a propeller in a fan comprising:
- a propeller to move a gas from an upstream side in a downstream axial direction while generating tip vortices from tips of propeller blades; and
- means for generating a flow augmenting aperture extending at least partially around the propeller, said flow augmenting aperture having a preselected size and is selectively spaced from the tips of the propeller blades so as to convert mass flow from tip vortices into an augmentation of useful axially downstream directed mass flow from said propeller.
- 18. The apparatus for enhancing the mass flow from a propeller as claimed in claim 17 and wherein said means for generating said flow augmenting aperture generates a plurality of said pumping apertures in successive axially spaced locations within the axial span of said propeller blades, with each of said pumping apertures converting mass flow from tip vortices into an augmentation of useful axially downstream directed mass flow from said propeller.
- 19. The apparatus as claimed in claim 18 wherein said means for generating said flow augmenting aperture comprises a plurality of ring elements spaced around the propeller blades.
PRIOR APPLICATION
This is a divisional of application Ser. No. 07/711,622 filed on Jun. 5, 1991, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,292,088 which was a continuation in part of patent application Ser. No. 419,137 filed Oct. 10, 1989, now abandoned.
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Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
711622 |
Jun 1991 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
419137 |
Oct 1989 |
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