The present document relates to the field of refrigerant evaporators. In particular, the disclosed refrigerant evaporators are adapted for pulse electrothermal defrosting and have high refrigerant tube density permitting efficient heat exchange.
It is desirable to make refrigerant evaporators efficient, compact, and lightweight. When compact and lightweight evaporators are used with air containing moisture, however, the moisture tends to condense on the evaporator as a layer of ice or frost. Before long, the ice clogs the evaporator and system efficiency is impaired.
The narrower air passages are between cooling coils or fins of an evaporator, the more quickly these passages accumulate ice and become obstructed. When the air passages are obstructed, airflow through the evaporator is impeded and efficiency of the refrigeration system incorporating the evaporator is also impaired.
In our previously issued patents and applications, it has been shown that tubing of an evaporator may serve as an electrical resistive heater, and that electrical current through this resistive heater may serve to melt and remove ice from the tubing and fins of the evaporator. We have used the term Pulse ElectroThermal Defrosting (PETD) to describe application of electrical power in pulses, typically of under a minute duration, and of high power density often greater than two kilowatts per square meter, to defrost evaporators and other devices.
In our prior work, electrical resistive heaters formed directly from common refrigeration tubing materials such as aluminum and copper have had low resistance. Providing reasonable electrical power to such low resistance resistive heaters requires heavy and expensive high current wiring and step-down transformers. For example, we have a system where the tubing of the evaporator itself serves as a secondary of a step-down transformer that is inductively coupled to a primary connected to an alternating current supply.
It is desirable to increase the electrical resistance of an evaporator to permit use of lower currents and higher voltages for melting and removing ice from tubing of the evaporator. Higher resistance has advantage in that it permits use of lighter wiring and less expensive switching devices and/or transformers.
We have also previously disclosed evaporators having higher resistance thin film resistive coatings over nonconductive or electrically insulated tubing. These embodiments are somewhat expensive to build because deposition of such thin film coatings is expensive.
A pulse electrothermal defrost evaporator system has multiple refrigerant tubes formed from an electrically and thermally conductive material and connected in parallel to reduce resistance to refrigerant flow. These tubes are, however, connected electrically in series to provide high electrical resistance. A controller is capable of detecting ice accumulation and connecting the series-connected tubes to a source of electrical power for deicing when it is necessary to deice the tubes.
In an alternative embodiment, a pulse electrothermal-defrost evaporator system has a long, wide-lumen, refrigerant tube to simultaneously provide moderately low resistance to refrigerant flow, and a moderately high electrical resistance. A controller is capable of detecting ice accumulation and connecting the series-connected tubes to a source of electrical power for deicing when it is necessary to deice the tubes.
In the embodiment of
In some of the embodiments of
In the embodiment of
The embodiment of
In the embodiment of
In alternative embodiments, such as those having narrow welded, staked or pressed fittings in place of threaded fittings, the tubes 108, 110, may all be spirally wound in the same direction since these fittings 112 may be closely spaced without interfering with each other.
In an embodiment, each alternately conductive and insulating manifold 104, 106, as illustrated in
In this embodiment, with the exception of end rings of one or both manifolds, each conductive ring is electrically connected to two tubes 108, 110, and each pair of tubes is electrically insulated from each other pair of tubes.
In this embodiment, the conductive rings of the output manifold 106 are offset by one tube from the conductive rings of the input distribution manifold 104. A single-tube ring is provided in place of two-tube rings at one or both ends of at least one of the manifolds 104, 106, to allow for this offset, these are arranged such that one single-tube ring appears at each end of the evaporator. This results in the spiral tubes 108 being electrically connected in series from a first electrical connection 140 to a second electrical connection 142 as illustrated in
In an embodiment, the resistive heater formed of the series-connected spiral tubes 108, 110, of the evaporator 100 is connected through a switching device 146 to a 115-volt or a 220-volt power-line source 148, as illustrated in
In an alternative embodiment, manifolds 104, 106 are fabricated from a nonconductive material such as a plastic; in this embodiment conductive metal straps are secured near the ends of, and bridging between in pairs, the refrigerant tubes 108, 110 to provide electrical connectivity equivalent to that of
In the embodiments of
A spiral-coil evaporator similar to one shown in
While the evaporator embodiment built and tested used refrigerant tubes having a single refrigerant passage of round cross section, similar devices may be built of tubing having other cross sections. For example, an alternative embodiment may be built of tubing having a square or rectangular cross section and formed into a spiral similar to that illustrated in
The evaporator cooling capacity at temperature difference between inlet air and tubes, TD=6° C., was found as PC=200 W. It has been found that sufficiently electrically resistive evaporators can also be directly connected to a common AC line, such as 115 VAC/60 Hz, thus avoiding cost of a step-down transformer. To perform PETD-enabled defrost, the evaporator was connected through a switch 146 (
In an embodiment, controller 150 is capable of detecting ice and/or frost accumulation on the evaporator. In various embodiments, the controller does so by detecting airflow obstruction through the evaporator, by detecting changes in response of the evaporator to vibration, or by detecting obstruction of light beams passing through the evaporator at locations where ice or frost will obstruct the light beams.
In an alternative embodiment, a refrigerant tube 202 is folded, then wound into a folded spiral as illustrated in
In an embodiment,
In yet another embodiment, as illustrated in
In yet another embodiment, as illustrated in
In yet another embodiment, as illustrated in
In these embodiments, including those of
By applying pulses of high power to the evaporator refrigerant tube, the controller can deice the evaporator in less than about a minute, and in embodiments between fifteen and thirty seconds. This rapid defrosting permits high efficiency of the system by reducing stray heating of the refrigeration system and permitting high duty cycles of the refrigeration system.
As illustrated in
The pulse-electrothermal deicing of the evaporator 800 is powered by two busses, one of which 814 may be coupled to an AC neutral connection, and the other 812 to a power source, such as an AC mains connection, an AC-DC, DC-DC, or DC-AC voltage converter, a pulse-duty transformer, a battery, or a supercapacitor, each section 802, 804, 806 having an electronic or electromechanical switching device 816, 818, 820 of the controller 150 for coupling that section 802, 804, 806 to the power source. In an embodiment, the controller 150 ensures that only one section 802, 804, 806 of the evaporator is coupled to the power source at a time to ensure that the power source is not overloaded.
In an alternative embodiment, suitable for use with high capacity systems the three sections 802, 804, 806 are coupled through switching devices 816, 818, 820 in Y or Delta connection to the three phases of a three-phase alternating-current source such as a three-phase mains power system of two hundred eight to six hundred forty volts, without any intervening stepdown transformer.
Evaporators of the present design have tubes that may be connected to sources of electrical power at times; as with anything else made by man they may also require maintenance from time to time. While not explicitly shown in most of the drawings, it is understood that safety interlocks will be employed to disconnect the evaporator from the power source during maintenance.
The illustrated embodiments show use of dielectrically isolated manifolds, such as those of
In the system of
The multiple sections of
The embodiment of
The evaporator may be equipped, in preferably all non-neutral power connections, with a fusible-link or other thermal-cutoff safety device for disconnecting the deicing electric current should the switching device 924 of the controller fail in an ON condition and the evaporator overheat in consequence. Fusible-link 930 is therefore thermally coupled to the evaporator tubing 902 and is wired electrically in series with the evaporator tubing 902 and switching device 924.
Further, since direct contact of an electrically-energized evaporator with human skin may cause thermal or electrical burns, or even electrocution, it is desirable that the deicing current not be applied to the evaporator when accessed for repair or maintenance even if a user ignores directions and fails to disconnect power to the equipment of which the evaporator is a part. The evaporator is therefore equipped in all non-neutral power connections, and preferably in all power connections, with safety interlock devices such as interlock switch 932. Interlock switch 932 may be a plug and socket arrangement that requires disconnection of the plug from the socket in order to open a cabinet or housing within which the evaporator resides. Interlock switch 932 may also be one or more series-connected switching devices that are mechanically coupled to one or more components of a housing or cabinet within which the evaporator resides in such manner that opening the housing or cabinet opens switch 932.
While the thermal cutoff or fusible link 930 and safety interlock 932 are not separately illustrated in most figures for simplicity, it is understood that these devices are appropriate for use with all illustrated embodiments, and that these devices should be interpreted as components of all illustrated embodiments.
In order to prevent wasting power by electrically heating other components of the system in which the evaporator is used, the tube 902 is coupled through an insulating union to other refrigerant-containing components standard in a refrigeration system, such as a compressor, such as compressor 852 (
An evaporator resembling that of
The illustrated embodiments are tubes-only evaporators in that the heat exchange surface area is primarily a surface of refrigerant tubes, and not that of fins attached to the refrigerant tubes. Similar embodiments may have metallic heat-exchange fins attached to individual tubes of the evaporator such that these fins are in thermal contact with at least one tube of the evaporator, but are in electrical contact with no more than one tube of the evaporator because electrical contact of fins with multiple tubes may disrupt defrosting current through the evaporator. Such a serpentine-finned embodiment 960 is illustrated in
In the serpentine-finned embodiment, a refrigerant tube 962 is formed of an electrically conductive material having some electrical resistance, such as a stainless-steel alloy. A sheet or strip of a alloy having resistivity within an order of magnitude of that of the tube 962 is punched with holes of sufficient diameter to pass tube 962 through the sheet and formed into a zig-zag or serpentine shape such that the holes align. The tube is then passed through the holes in the sheet, and electrically and thermally attached to the sheet at multiple points to form serpentine fins 964 attached to tube 962. At each end of tube 962 in an evaporator is a clamp 966, 972 for coupling tube 962 to wire 968 or other nearby or adjacent tubes (not shown). Tube 962 may be bent as illustrated in
The embodiments of
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various other changes in the form and details may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is to be understood that various changes may be made in adapting the invention to different embodiments without departing from the broader inventive concepts disclosed herein and comprehended by the claims that follow.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/111,581, filed Nov. 5, 2008, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
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