The present invention is directed to a removable tube heat exchanger and header plate, and, more particularly, to an improved heat exchanger header plate for removable tube heat exchangers.
Heat exchangers typically are formed of a plurality of tube and fin assemblies, the ends of which extend through apertures in opposed header plates. A heating or cooling fluid, e.g., oil, air, etc. flows through the tubes. The tube and fin assemblies must be able to withstand system operating pressures without leaking. Elastomeric seals are sometimes used within the apertures in the header plates to seal the tube within the header plate thus forming a tube to header plate joint. Some heat exchanger designs allow the tube and fin assemblies to be removable such that a damaged tube can be replaced without dismantling an entire heat exchanger. According to prior art heat exchangers, the tubes are removed by raising a first end of a tube into the first of two header plates via a first aperture having a cylindrical seal along the entire length of the header plate opening until the second end of the tube clears the second of two header plates. The second end of the tube is swung outwardly to clear the edge of the second header plate and the tube, which is now angled relative to the first header plate, is then pulled from the first header plate, freeing it from the heat exchanger. Prior art aperture and seal designs allow an elastomeric seal to seat within the first header plate in order to seal the tube during heat exchanger operation, and also allow angular movement of a tube for removal and installation from the header plates. See, U.S. Pat. No. 3,391,732, U.S. Pat. No. 4,344,478, U.S. Pat. No. 4,216,824, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,930,568, 5,433,268 each of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties. However, prior art aperture and seal designs do not optimize the ability of the heat exchangers to withstand high operating pressures while also allowing easy removal and installation of individual heat exchanger tubes. Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an aperture and seal configuration to improve the ability of a heat exchanger to withstand high operating pressures while also allowing easy removal and installation of individual heat exchanger tubes. It is an additional object of the present invention to provide a heat exchanger header plate which reduces or wholly overcomes some or all of the difficulties inherent in prior known heat exchangers having field removable heat exchanger tubes such as pressure capabilities, seal integrity, and overall heat exchanger life expectancy. Particular objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art, that is, those who are knowledgeable or experienced in this field of technology, in view of the following disclosure of the invention and detailed description of certain preferred embodiments.
Embodiments of the present invention may be used to advantageously provide a heat exchanger having advantageous pressure capabilities while facilitating the removal and installation of individual heat exchange tubes without disassembling the frame of the heat exchanger. The heat exchangers of the present invention include at least a top tank having a top header plate, a bottom tank having a bottom header plate, a frame work connecting the top and bottom tanks, apertures in the top and bottom header plates, seals and flow tubes configured to withstand system operating pressure. In accordance with one aspect of the present invention more fully described with reference to the Figures, the top header plate includes a plurality of apertures with each aperture having a nonuniform diameter of the interior aperture wall, for example, as determined at at least two, three or four locations from one end of the aperture to the other. The diameters of the aperture, and thus the wall of the aperture itself, are configured to allow a flow tube to be inserted into or removed from a heat exchanger frame via the aperture at an insertion angle. The insertion angle is defined as the angle at which the flow tube is inserted into or removed from the aperture and is determined in part by the length of the flow tube, the distance between top and bottom header plates and the direction of insertion of the flow tube into the aperture. The insertion angle must be sufficient to allow the flow tube to be inserted into the top header plate while avoiding contact with the bottom header plate. In this manner the flow tube can be inserted up into the aperture in the top header plate and then lowered into a corresponding aperture in the bottom header plate. The aperture, therefore, has a tolerance for the angled movement of a flow tube relative to its normal position when installed between header plates, i.e. the configuration of the wall of the aperture allows for the angled movement of the flow tube during removal or installation.
According to one embodiment, a seal is fixedly provided at a point within the aperture, such as the seal being retained within a groove within the wall of the aperture. According to an additional embodiment, differing diameters of the wall of the aperture provide shoulders which support the seal and retain the seal within the aperture upon installation and removal of the flow tube and also provide support for the seal during high or low pressure operation of the heat exchanger. According to one embodiment, the aperture has a groove within the interior wall of the aperture which fixedly retains the seal with the diameter of the aperture on either side of the seal being capable of allowing the angled insertion and removal of the flow tube. The flow tube protrudes at least into the header plate and engages the seal which is seated between the flow tube and the header plate. In a certain embodiment, the flow tube may also protrude beyond the header plate. As previously stated, the aperture has a diameter or other configuration sufficient to provide a tolerance to angled movement of the flow tube through the aperture. In this manner, the aperture may have one or more diameters greater than the diameter of the flow tube along a given axis. The seal also has a diameter or other configuration or dimension sufficient to engage the flow tube in a manner to allow high pressure operation of the heat exchanger when the flow tube is approximately perpendicular to the header plate yet allows angled movement of the flow tube through the aperture, i.e. the seal also has dimensions sufficient to allow it to be compressed to a certain design compression when the tube is fully inserted into the aperture and brought perpendicular to the header plates.
In accordance with an additional aspect of the present invention, a header plate for a heat exchanger has one or more circular apertures through the plate wherein each aperture has at least two differing diameters within the header plate. Alternatively, the aperture may have as many as three or four diameters represented by adjacent sections or portions with the diameter of each section or portion being the same as or different from another section or portion. The words “section’ and “portion” are used interchangeably herein. According to one nonlimiting example, the header plate has an aperture with a first portion having a first diameter. The first portion is designed so that its diameter is sufficiently large to allow a flow tube to be inserted at an angle to the centerline of the aperture as a whole without interference detrimental to the condition of the flow tube or header plate. The first portion also provides support for one face of the seal. A second portion of the aperture having a second diameter is adjacent the first portion, with the second diameter being larger than the first diameter. The second portion retains the seal and allows the seal to be compressed to a design compression when the tube is fully inserted and brought to the approximate perpendicular. A third portion of the aperture having a third diameter is adjacent the second portion, with the third diameter being smaller than the second diameter. The third portion provides support for a second face of the seal and is also sufficiently large in diameter to allow the flow tube to be inserted at an angle to the centerline of the aperture as a whole without interference. A fourth portion having a fourth diameter is adjacent the third portion, with the fourth diameter being sufficiently large in diameter to allow the flow tube to be inserted at an angle to the centerline of the aperture as a whole without interference. Alternatively, the fourth portion can be of a conical design with a diameter gradually increasing toward the tank side of the header plate. According to one embodiment of the present invention, the diameters of the first, third, and fourth portions of the aperture progressively increase in diameter to allow the flow tube to be inserted at an angle to the centerline of the aperture as a whole.
From the foregoing disclosure, it will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, that is, those who are knowledgeable or experienced in this area of technology, that the present invention provides a significant technological advance. Preferred embodiments of the heat exchanger header plate of the present invention can provide improved sealing and higher operating pressures while allowing heat exchanger tubes mounted therein to be individually removable, for example without dismantling the heat exchanger. These and additional features and advantages of the invention disclosed here will be further understood from the following detailed disclosure of certain preferred embodiments.
Certain preferred embodiments are described in detail below with reference to the appended drawings wherein:
The figures referred to above are not drawn necessarily to scale and should be understood to present a representation of the invention, illustrative of the principles involved. Some features of the heat exchanger header plate depicted in the drawings have been enlarged or distorted relative to others to facilitate explanation and understanding. The same reference numbers are used in the drawings for similar or identical components and features shown in various alternative embodiments. Heat exchanger header plates as disclosed herein, will have configurations and components determined, in part, by the intended application and environment in which they are used.
Referring to
Heat exchanger 2 comprises a plurality of flow tubes 4 having a plurality of fin elements or fins 6 secured to an exterior surface thereof. Tubes 4 are mounted at a first or upper end 8 to a first or upper header plate 10 and at a second or lower end 12 to a second or lower header plate 14. Upper and lower header plates 10, 14 are fixed with respect to one another by a frame of heat exchanger 2 (not shown). Examples of tube and fin element designs useful in the present invention are shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,570,704; 4,344,478; 4,216,824; 3,391,732; 5,433,268; and 5,236,045 each of which are hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
Heat exchangers within the scope of the present invention include those having a plurality of heat exchanger tubes arranged in columns and rows, and interconnected to receive and pass a heating/cooling fluid (dependent upon application).
The rows extend longitudinally across the heat exchanger, substantially perpendicular to the direction of air or other external fluid flow, and the columns are substantially perpendicular to the rows. The columns, for example, may be “in-line” or “off set” as shown below (top view of tube-and-fin assemblies):
It is to be understood that alternate off set designs are within the scope of the present invention such as where tube-and-fin assemblies of every fourth row are aligned.
In a preferred embodiment, several rows of tubes 4 extend between upper and lower header plates 10, 14 forming columns. An upper end 8 of each tube 4 extends into an aperture 16 in upper header plate 10 and a lower end 12 extends into aperture 18 in lower header plate 14. Liquid flows from a first or upper tank 17 (seen in
As shown in
As seen in
Some heat exchangers are designed so as to allow tubes 4 to be removable without the need for disassembling the frame of heat exchanger 2. This can allow quick replacement of damaged or worn tubes while minimizing the associated costs. To remove a tube 4 from heat exchanger 2, as seen in the embodiment illustrated in
The upper and lower ends 8, 12 of tube 4 are exposed to system fluid at operating pressure in upper and lower tanks 17, 19, formed in part by the upper and lower header plates respectively, and, therefore, the high pressure side of the heat exchanger is that area above upper header plate 10 and below lower header plate 14. Correspondingly, the portion of tube and fin assembly 2 between the header plates which is exposed to air is considered the low pressure side. As used herein, the term “tube side” refers to the low pressure side of upper and lower header plates 10, 14 respectively, that is, the area of the upper and lower header plates typically exposed to the air and not exposed directly to the high pressure fluid in the upper and lower tanks 17, 19. Accordingly, the term “tank side” refers to the high pressure side of upper and lower header plates 10, 14, that is the area of the upper and lower header plates 10 and 14 exposed to the high pressure fluid in the upper and lower tanks 17, 19.
The construction of aperture 16 is shown in more detail in
Turning now to
The actual dimensions of diameters A, B, C, and D, as well as the depth of each portion, that is, its dimensional length along longitudinal axis L, will be determined by the specific application of a given heat exchanger and the desired insertion angle α required for insertion or removal of a heat exchanger tube. Certain factors that will affect the desired insertion angle α include such factors as the diameter of the flow tube, the length of the flow tube, the dimensions of the fin elements of the flow tube, the operating pressure of the heat exchanger, the type of seal used, and beveling of the portions of the aperture, if desired. Diameter A must be large enough to allow tube 4 to be inserted at insertion angle α to axis L without binding the tube within the portion 30 of the header plate and preventing its proper insertion into the header plate, but small enough to provide proper support to retain the seal under system operating pressure. At the limiting tube angle α for a given heat exchanger as shown in
Diameter B must be larger than diameter A in order to provide for seal 50 and shoulder 34 between first and second portions 30, 32. Diameter B and corresponding shoulders fixedly retain seal 50 and is sized to allow seal 50 to be compressed to a designed compression level when tube 4 is in its normal approximately vertical orientation, seen as the left most tube 4 in
Diameter C must be smaller than diameter B in order to provide for shoulder 38 between second and third portions 32, 36. Diameter C is sized to provide clearance for tube 4 when it is oriented at angle α, as well as providing proper support for Seal 50 during tube installation and removal as well as low pressure operation. Low pressure operation refers to a condition in which the pressure sides of upper header plate 10 are reversed. That is, the pressure within upper tank 17 is lower than that portion of the heat exchanger between upper and lower header plates 10, 14 which is typically exposed to air. In such a reverse pressure condition, shoulder 38 would provide support against the source of higher pressure. Diameter C may be, in certain preferred embodiments, approximately equal to diameter A.
In certain nonlimiting embodiments, diameter D is larger than diameter C. Diameter D is sized to provide clearance for tube 4 when tube 4 is at insertion angle α with respect to longitudinal axis L to prevent binding of tube 4. In other embodiments, diameter D is approximately equal to diameter C or the fourth portion 40 may gradually increase in a beveled manner toward the tank side surface of the heat exchanger plate.
The depths of each portion may vary as well based on operating conditions of the heat exchanger. Specifically, for example, the depth of first portion 30 and third portion 36 must be sized to provide a sufficient thickness for shoulder 34 and shoulder 38 which can withstand the pressures incurred by Seal 50.
In the illustrated embodiments, aperture 18 has the same construction as aperture 16. It is to be appreciated that in other embodiments, aperture 18 may have a constant diameter, or, alternatively, have a single channel containing a groove incorporating a seal to provide a seal between tube 4 and aperture 18.
In another preferred embodiment, shown in
In light of the foregoing disclosure of the invention and description of the preferred embodiments, those skilled in this area of technology will readily understand that various modifications and adaptations can be made without departing from the true scope and spirit of the invention. All such modifications and adaptations are intended to be covered by the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of the filing date of provisional application Ser. No. 60/092,826 filed Jul. 14, 1998 hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60092826 | Jul 1998 | US |