This application is related to U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 11/404,424 filed Apr. 14, 2006 and entitled “Particle Burning in an Exhaust System.” This application is also related to U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 11/412,289 filed Apr. 26, 2006 and entitled “Air Purification System Employing Particle Burning.”
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to emission controls and more particularly to systems for reducing particles in exhaust streams.
2. Description of the Prior Art
When a fuel burns incompletely, pollutants such as particles and hydrocarbons are released into the atmosphere. The United States Environmental Protection Agency has passed regulations that limit the amount of pollutants that, for example, diesel trucks, power plants, engines, automobiles, and off-road vehicles can release into the atmosphere.
Currently, industries attempt to follow these regulations by adding scrubbers, catalytic converters and particle traps to their exhaust systems. However, these solutions increase the amount of back pressure exerted on the engine or combustion system, decreasing performance. In addition, the scrubbers and particle traps themselves become clogged and require periodic cleaning to minimize back pressure.
Radiation sources and heaters have been used in exhaust systems, for example, to periodically clean the particle traps or filter beds. Others solutions have included injecting fuel into the filter beds or exhaust streams as the exhaust enters the filter beds to combust the particles therein. However, the filter beds can be sensitive to high temperatures and the radiation sources and heaters must be turned off periodically.
An exhaust system comprises a reverse flow heat exchanger including a plate defining a plane and separating an exit chamber and an intake chamber. Each chamber of the heat exchanger has an inlet and an outlet located at opposing ends to allow flow therethrough. The exhaust system also comprises a first manifold coupled to the reverse flow heat exchanger and in fluid communication with the intake chamber inlet. A vane disposed within the first manifold is situated relative to the intake chamber inlet so as to reduce resistance to fluid flow near the intake chamber inlet. The exhaust system can also comprise a heating manifold that receives exhaust from the intake chamber, heats the exhaust, and returns the exhaust to the exit chamber. In some embodiments, the heating manifold is a combustion chamber for burning particles in the exhaust. In these embodiments the exhaust system can also comprise a radiation source for heating the particles to at least an ignition temperature.
Another exemplary exhaust system comprises a first manifold and a reverse flow heat exchanger coupled to the first manifold. Here, the reverse flow heat exchanger defines a transverse plane and includes a plurality of parallel plates separating a number of chambers, each chamber having an inlet and an outlet. These chambers comprise a set of intake chambers alternating with a set of exit chambers, where the inlets of the intake chambers being in fluid communication with the first manifold and the outlets of the intake chambers being in fluid communication with the inlets of the exit chambers. The exhaust system can further comprise a heating manifold coupled to the reverse flow heat exchanger to provide the fluid communication between the outlets of the intake chambers and the inlets of the exit chambers.
A vehicle comprising an internal combustion engine and the exhaust system described above is also provided. The exhaust system can serve as either or both of a muffler and a catalytic converter.
An exhaust system comprises a reverse flow heat exchanger coupled to a means for heating the exhaust gas, such as a combustion chamber for burning particles carried by the exhaust gas. The reverse flow heat exchanger recovers heat from the exhaust gas after passing through the heating means and transfers the heat to the exhaust gas entering the heating means. The heat recovery increases the energy efficiency of the exhaust system and provides further advantages as described below.
In operation, exhaust gas 210 from a source such as a diesel engine enter the manifold 220 and are directed through the heat exchanger 110 to the combustion chamber 130. In the illustrated embodiment, particles within the exhaust are burned in the combustion chamber 130, significantly increasing the temperature of the exhaust gas. Combustion of the particles is facilitated by a radiation source 140 attached to the combustion chamber 130. Suitable radiation sources 140 and designs for the combustion chamber 130 are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/404,424 filed on Apr. 14, 2006 and titled “Particle Burning in an Exhaust System.”
The heated exhaust gas 240 exits the combustion chamber 130, passes back through the heat exchanger 110, and leaves the exhaust system 100 through the manifold 230. In the heat exchanger 110, heat from the hot gas 240 exiting the combustion chamber 130 is transferred to the incoming exhaust gas 210 from the manifold 220 through the plate 120. By using the residual heat of the combustion of the particles to heat the incoming exhaust gas 210, the exhaust system 100 utilizes less energy. Other advantages of the heat exchanger 110 are discussed herein.
It will be appreciated that although the illustrated embodiment in
The cross section 300 is characterized by a transverse plane 350, seen edge on in
In
In the illustrated embodiment, the inlet 420 is below the transverse plane 350 and the outlet 430 is above the transverse plane 350. As with the intake chamber 310, the inlet 420 and outlet 430 are on opposite sides of the transverse plane 350 so that the fluid flow is diagonal across the exit chamber 410. Arranging the fluid flows along the diagonals of the two chambers 310, 410 provides the gases 210 and 240 greater opportunity to transfer heat therebetween.
Some embodiments of the heat exchanger 110 include multiple plates 120 to form multiple alternating intake and exit chambers 310, 410 to provide even greater heat transfer.
The manifold 220 can also include one or more vanes disposed relative to an intake chamber inlet 330 to reduce resistance to fluid flow near that intake chamber inlet 330. For example, vanes 530 extend from the plates 120 in
Some embodiments of the exhaust system 100, 800 include insulation 910 around the heat exchanger 110 and the combustion chamber 130, as shown in
The heat exchanger 110 is again characterized by a transverse plane 1010 with the inlet 330 below the transverse plane 1010 and the outlet 340 above the transverse plane 1010. Likewise, the inlet 420 is below the transverse plane 1010 and the outlet 430 is above the transverse plane 1010. The inlets 330, 420 and outlets 340, 430 are on opposite sides of the transverse plane 1010 so that fluid flows diagonally through the chambers 310, 410.
Several further advantages of reverse flow heat exchangers 110 should be noted. For example, these heat exchangers are self-cleaning. It will be appreciated that should a deposit form on an internal surface of one of the plates 120, the restriction to the flow of exhaust gas around the deposit will tend to cause a local increase in the temperature at the restriction. Eventually, the local temperature increase will reach an ignition temperature of the deposit material, causing the deposit to burn away. Another advantage of the heat exchangers 110 is that the heated internal surfaces of the chambers 310, 410 reduce the resistance to fluid flow through the chambers 310, 410 thereby lowering head loss through the exhaust system 100. Further, it will be appreciated that the heat exchangers 110 can serve to muffle sound due to the expansions and contractions that the exhaust gas goes through as it passes through successive openings. The muffling effect can be further enhanced by tuning the dimensions of the chambers to behave as resonating chambers. Accordingly, heat exchangers 110 can replace mufflers on vehicles.
In the foregoing specification, the present invention is described with reference to specific embodiments thereof, but those skilled in the art will recognize that the present invention is not limited thereto. Various features and aspects of the above-described present invention may be used individually or jointly. Further, the present invention can be utilized in any number of environments and applications beyond those described herein without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the specification. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive. It will be recognized that the terms “comprising,” “including,” and “having,” as used herein, are specifically intended to be read as open-ended terms of art.
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