The invention relates to a brazed refrigerant condenser which comprises a heat-exchanger network with flat tubes and corrugated ribs, collector tubes which have a fluid connection with the flat tubes, and also a collector which is arranged in parallel with a collector tube, accommodates a dryer and/or a filter in itself and has a fluid connection to the collector via two overflow openings—a condenser of this type is disclosed by EP 0 669 506 of the applicant.
This known condenser is what is known as a condenser module, in which a collector is arranged parallel to one of the collector pipes and is connected to the collector pipe via two overflow openings. As a result, the refrigerant overflows from the collector pipe into the collector, where there is a dryer, that is to say a container, normally made of plastic, which is filled with drying granules to dehydrate the refrigerant. After the refrigerant has flowed around or through the dryer, it passes through a filter screen into the lower region of the collector. The screen has the task of cleaning the refrigerant from contaminants in the form of extremely fine particles. After that, the refrigerant enters the collecting part of the condenser again via the lower overflow opening. In this design, all the metal parts, that is to say flat tubes, ribs, collector pipes and collectors, are brazed in the brazing oven, that is to say approximately at a temperature of 620° C. The plastic insert with the granules does not withstand such temperatures, for which reason it is put into the collector after the brazing, whereupon said collector is closed by means of a cover. The insert with drying granules can then also be replaced for maintenance purposes. Similar designs with an inserted dryer cartridge, which is also integrated with a filter screen as an installed part, emerge from further documents from the applicant, EP 0 689 041 B1 and EP 0 867 670 A2. Furthermore, condenser modules from the applicant have also become known which have only the dryer insert with granules, that is to say without a filter screen, that is to say EP 0 668 986 B1 and DE 43 19 293 C2. The common factor in all these designs is that the dryer insert, with or without filter screen, is mounted, that is to say positioned, in the collector only after the brazing process of the condenser. Following this introduction of the dryer/filter insert, the collector must be closed in a fluid-tight and pressure-tight manner. This requires, firstly, appropriate constructional measures in the form of an opening on the collector with a fitting cover and, secondly, additional operations following the brazing in order to mount the dryer insert. Of course, this entails corresponding costs, which are reflected in the price of the condenser module.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to improve a refrigerant condenser of the type mentioned at the beginning to the effect that the mounting of the dryer/filter insert is simplified and production costs of the entire condenser can be reduced.
This object is achieved by the features of patent claim 1 and those of method claim 11. The fact that the dryer including filter is brazed to the collector means that the condenser can be mounted completely before the brazing process, that is to say inclusive of dryer with drying material and filter. Thus, the subsequent introduction of the dryer/filter insert after brazing is dispensed with. Dryer and/or filter can also be adhesively bonded to the collector during the brazing process, for example by means of a temperature-resistant adhesive. Likewise, a form-fitting or frictional connection between the dryer/filter unit and the collector can already be produced before the brazing process, so that the unit is positioned in a fixed manner in the collector and can then be subjected to the brazing process without impairment. In all these solutions, it is a precondition that the drying material is temperature-resistant, that is to say the temperatures of about 620° C. occurring during the brazing process do not impair its function.
A form-fitting connection can be produced, for example, by arranging ring-like beads above and below the dryer/filter unit, and a force-fitting connection can be achieved by the housing of the dryer/filter unit being pressed into the collector, that is to say retained there by means of a press fit.
Further advantageous refinements of the invention emerge from the subclaims. The dryer material can either be present in the form of granules, which are enclosed in a perforated metal container, or it is used as a solid compound, for example as a cylindrical rod, which is connected to the filter insert and is thus fixed in the collector by brazing. The dryer/filter insert therefore consists of a metallic material, preferably an aluminum alloy, which can be brazed to the collector, which likewise consists of an aluminum alloy.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is illustrated in the drawing and will be described in more detail in the following text. In the drawing:
A dryer/filter insert 11 is built into the interior 6 of the collector 5. It comprises an upper part, a perforated metal cage 12, in which the dryer material is enclosed in the form of granules 13. The lower part of the insert 11 comprises a filter screen 14, whose outer frame 15 is matched to the inner cross section of the collector space 6 and is brazed or merely connected mechanically to the latter. The relatively close-mesh filter screen 14 forms a cylindrical area which is arranged approximately coaxially with respect to the collector 5 but leaves a gap 16 in relation to the dividing wall 7. The dryer/filter insert 11, comprising the upper dryer part 12 and the lower filter part 14, is therefore introduced into the interior 6 and positioned before the brazing process in such a way that it is brazed or merely mechanically connected to the inner wall 17 of the collector 5 during the subsequent brazing process. Therefore, following the brazing operation, this insert is arranged in a fixed manner in the collector and can thus fulfill its function, as will be described below:
The refrigerant, which has previously flowed through the condenser in a known manner, flows through the overflow opening 8 in the wall 7 from the collecting pipe 2 into the interior 6 of the collector 5, as indicated by the arrows a and b. There, it comes into contact with the metal sleeve 12, flows through the perforation openings 12′ and thus passes into the interior of the sleeve 12, where the granules 13 are located—the latter remove the water contained in the refrigerant. The granules 13 are commercially available and are resistant to brazing temperatures such as occur during the brazing of aluminum. The refrigerant then flows into the interior of the approximately cylindrical filter screen 14 and passes through the filter screen 14 from the inside to the outside, that is to say approximately in the radial direction, and then, as illustrated by the arrow c, flows via the overflow opening 9 in the wall 7 into the collecting pipe 2 again, that is to say into the chamber 18 located underneath the dividing wall 10. From there, it flows through the lowest tubes of the condenser to the outlet of the condenser.
A further embodiment of the dryer/filter insert is illustrated in
A further exemplary embodiment is illustrated in
The entire dryer/filter unit 45, including the ring-like flanges 48, 49, is introduced into the interior of the collecting tube 44 before the brazing process and is positioned there. The collector 38 is then closed by the two covers 39, 40. After that, the entire condenser prepared for the brazing process is put into the brazing oven and brazed there. Following the brazing process, the dryer/filter unit 45 is fully capable of functioning, which takes place in the following manner:
The refrigerant flows—in a manner analogous to the previous exemplary embodiments—following the arrow a via the overflow opening 41 firstly into the annular space 47 and from there via the perforation of the sleeve 46 into the interior of the latter. There, the refrigerant comes into contact with the granules 50, as a result of which dehydration takes place. From the interior of the sleeve 46, the refrigerant can escape both upward into the space 44 and downward into the space 43. In the upper part 44, the gaseous phase of the refrigerant will be collected, while the liquid phase will flow through the filter screen 51 into the lower space 43, so that primarily liquid refrigerate will be collected there; this then passes via the overflow opening 42 into the chamber 36 and then into the lowest tubes of the condenser, which generally form what is known as the undercooling section of the condenser.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
101 49 798 | Oct 2001 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP02/09422 | 8/23/2002 | WO | 00 | 4/9/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/031885 | 4/17/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4707999 | Ohta et al. | Nov 1987 | A |
5088294 | Ando | Feb 1992 | A |
5159821 | Nakamura | Nov 1992 | A |
5419141 | Burk | May 1995 | A |
5537839 | Burk et al. | Jul 1996 | A |
5992174 | Mittelstrass | Nov 1999 | A |
6341647 | Nobuta et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6374632 | Nobuta et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
43 19 293 | Dec 1994 | DE |
199 26 990 | Dec 1999 | DE |
100 04 276 | Aug 2000 | DE |
199 57 307 | May 2001 | DE |
0 668 986 | Aug 1995 | EP |
0 669 506 | Aug 1995 | EP |
0 689 041 | Dec 1995 | EP |
0 867 670 | Sep 1998 | EP |
1 006 323 | Jun 2000 | EP |
1 202 007 | May 2002 | EP |
2 746 908 | Oct 1997 | FR |
2 750 761 | Jan 1998 | FR |
2000-46444 | Feb 2000 | JP |
2001-141332 | May 2001 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040244410 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |