The invention is an electromagnetic device for pre-treating flow of fluids such as air and fuel prior to combustion in an internal combustion engine such as a piston engine or a gas turbine to increase efficiency while unwanted or harmful environmental emissions are reduced.
Attempts to influence and improve the combustion processes by exposing the combustion process or supply lines, for a magnetic field, has been ongoing at least since about the 1960s. Installation of the magnets to prevent iron filings from engine production to get into aircraft engines have been used during World War II.
It is believed that magnetic fields may improve combustion processes by magnetically influencing the fluids that run into the combustion process, even if the applicant knows no full scientific explanation of such electromagnetic pretreatment of fluids would work. It is through practical testing and isolated experiments that the applicant has been able to develop practical magnetic devices designed for this purpose, see e.g. NO316089, U.S. Pat. No. 7,650,877, NO329826.
In prior art systems for magnetic pretreatment of fuel or combustion air permanent magnets are used. These may also be made as electromagnets, but it takes a lot of electric current in order to generate a magnetic field corresponding to the field from a permanent magnet. Permanent magnets based on neodymium are very strong. This makes the work on the assembly line difficult because of the magnetic forces induced on everything in the vicinity that may be magnetized by permanent magnets in the process. When these permanent magnets are mounted on large engines, where the magnets are to be scaled relative to the size of the fluid flow, one will quickly end up with magnets of a strength that may be dangerous to work with because one may risk damage by crushing.
On some systems, it is also not very advisable to mount heavy permanent magnets because the weight of the magnets will provide long-term damage to the air and fuel pipe and thus it would mean that one would have to reinforce the structures to an undesirable extent.
Presently, the applicant uses several permanent magnets mounted in sequence on fluid supply pipes to achieve enhanced effects on engines and combustion facilities. The device according to the present invention occupies less space than the one used in prior art, and also weigh less.
The present system works dynamically, so that it better works by variations of the liquid and gas velocities in a given engine or turbine system. Strong permanent magnets are made of rare earth metals, is a limited resource. An electromagnetic system benefits from common electrical conductors such as copper or aluminum, and cores mainly of iron, and may thus be supplied in large volumes without the same restrictions one can risk when using rare earth metals.
The reference numbers in
The present invention will be described below in various embodiments. The present invention is illustrated in an apparatus for magnetic pre-treatment of a first or second flow of fluid (11, 12) in a supply pipe (1, 1′) wherein the fluid flow runs to a combustion chamber (61). The first fluid flow may be a fuel flow (11) and the second fluid flow may be an air flow (12). At least two magnetic fields (22) are led through the fluid flow (11, 12) which runs through the supply pipe (1, 1′), see
Each magnetic field (22) may have an arbitrary direction through the fluid flow (11, 12) and just run through a cross sectional or longitudinal part of the fluid flow. One example of this is that the magnetic field (22) runs generally transversely a small section of a supply pipe (1, 1′) that guides a fluid flow, whether it is the air flow or the fuel flow.
In a preferred embodiment of the inventor the magnetic fields are formed as transverse field relative to the axis of the supply pipe (1, 1′). This has several advantages.
The magnetic field 22 is induced in each location of the at least one electromagnet 2 comprising an electrical coil 21 receiving energy from a voltage source 3. An electric pulse generator 4 is supplied with power from the power source 3 and is arranged to generate electrical pulses P of desired frequency f to the electric coil 21.
The device according to the invention has in one embodiment a polarity control device 5 for the electrical pulses P wherein the polarity control device is arranged between pulse generator 4 and the electric coil 21, as illustrated in
The device according to the invention may be arranged so that the polarity control device 5 for the electrical pulses P is arranged to provide a time delay or phase displacement of the electrical pulses P such that one in this way may control the polarity of the pulses if the pulses are parts of a pulse train with varying polarity as a function of time.
The device according to another embodiment of the invention may be arranged such that a polarity control device 5′ for the electrical pulses P is arranged between the pulse generator 4 and the power source 3, as indicated by the dotted lines 5′ in
The device according to one embodiment of the invention has a control unit 41 that regulates the electrical pulses P to be generated in the pulse generator 4. The control unit 41 is arranged to send control signals 42 on the basis of sensor signals 63 from at least one sensor 62 in the combustion engine 6. These control signals 42 determine the electrical pulses) form, voltage, amperage, frequency, or pulse pattern, and also their polarity. These sensor signals 63 as the control unit 41 will act on the basis of can for example be one or more of the following parameters:
The device according to one embodiment of the invention may be arranged so that the control signals 45 from the control unit 41 also control the polarity control device 5.
One may imagine that other devices, where a continuous flame shall be formed, such as pan heaters (which has no RPM) or turbines, other parameters may be used as input parameters to the control system which controls the pulses to electro magnets.
Since the velocities in the fuel line and inlet air pipe will be different, it will in one embodiment of the invention be generated different pulse speeds in the electric magnets that affect the two lines/pipes separately.
The number of electromagnets 2 in an embodiment of the invention is two or more as shown in
As mentioned above, at least one of magnetic fields 22 may run mainly transversely of at least one of the fluid flows of air or fuel 11, 12 inside the air pipe or fuel pipe 1, 1′.
The device according to the invention may have two or more electro-magnets 2 arranged with a mutual distance along the flow direction of the fluid flow 11, 12. The distance between two electromagnets may for example be as large as the diameter or length of each electro-magnet. It is possible to mount the electro magnets so that they generate their magnetic field transversely of the flow in the pipe, but that a subsequent magnet forms a magnetic field which is rotated slightly, for example between 5 and 30 degrees relative to the magnetic field of present magnet. The frequency f of the electrical pulses P may be adapted relative to the speed of fluid flow 11, 12 so that a fluid volume u which is exposed to an electromagnets 2 pulse P at a first point of time t1 will move with a velocity v to a next electromagnet 2 and is affected by a pulse P from this next electromagnet. This may be repeated for one or more additional electromagnets. According to an embodiment of the invention the above mentioned repeated pulses P which a fluid volume u is exposed to along its path, may have different directions relative to each other, for example, every second polarity opposite. In this way, short pulses can be made stronger than a continuous induced magnetic field, which will save a lot of power and thus a lot of energy, and which thereby can reduce fuel consumption used for this purpose.
It is the inventor's experience that magnetic influencing of the fluid 11, 12 should be made elsewhere relative to the parts of the supply pipe 1, 1′ where turbulence, eddies or unwanted pressure pulsations in the pipe are formed. The electromagnet 2 according to the invention is therefore, according to an embodiment of the invention, arranged elsewhere, preferably downstream relative to any such eddies, turbulence-forming regions or pressure pulse formations in the fluid flow 11, 12 in the tube (1, 1′).
The device according to the invention may be for pre-treatment of fluids for a combustion chamber 61 that may be open in one end, e.g. as part of a flare.
The device according to the invention may be for pre-treatment of fluids for the combustion chamber 61 in a boiler 63.
The device according to the invention may be for pre-treatment of fluids for the combustion chamber 61 in a combustion engine 6 such as a gas turbine.
The device according to the invention may be for pre-treatment of fluids for one or more combustion chambers 61 in a combustion engine 6, which may be a piston engine.
The device according to the invention may be for the pre-treatment of a first fluid 11 which is fuel, such as heavy oil, light oil, gasoline, diesel, methane, or alcohol. Plant oils such as rapeseed oil may also be used. The second fluid 12 may be air, pure oxygen, nitrogen free air or other oxygen-containing gas.
Significant advantages of the invention are as follows that the device according to the invention allows, as opposed to the use of permanent magnets, control of the strength of the magnetic-pulses generated through the fluids 11, 12. It is possible to vary the magnetic field strength to strengths of the magnetic field that provides a near optimal increase in the efficiency of the combustion. Furthermore, it is possible to control the shape of the pulses P, and the frequency of the pulses P as shown in
Another advantage is that when one generate electrical pulses one may achieve strong magnetic fields in limited time frames, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20110308 | Feb 2011 | NO | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2664394 | Reeves | Dec 1953 | A |
4308847 | Ruizzo, Jr. | Jan 1982 | A |
4865747 | Larson | Sep 1989 | A |
5074998 | De Baat Doelman | Dec 1991 | A |
5122277 | Jones | Jun 1992 | A |
5171431 | Schulte | Dec 1992 | A |
5517975 | Iwata | May 1996 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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4229594 | Mar 1994 | DE |
2442011 | Mar 2008 | GB |
316089 | Dec 2003 | NO |
329826 | Dec 2010 | NO |
Entry |
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English language machine translation of DE 4229594 A1, created Apr. 28, 2015. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120217190 A1 | Aug 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61450713 | Mar 2011 | US |