(1) Field of the Invention
The invention relates to compressors. More particularly, the invention relates to sealing of economized screw-type compressors.
(2) Description of the Related Art
Screw type compressors are commonly used in air conditioning and refrigeration applications. In such a compressor, intermeshed male and female lobed rotors or screws are rotated about their axes to pump the working fluid (refrigerant) from a low pressure inlet end to a high pressure outlet end. During rotation, sequential lobes of the male rotor serve as pistons driving refrigerant downstream and compressing it within the space between an adjacent pair of female rotor lobes and the housing. Likewise sequential lobes of the female rotor produce compression of refrigerant within a space between an adjacent pair of male rotor lobes and the housing. The interlobe spaces of the male and female rotors in which compression occurs form compression pockets (alternatively described as male and female portions of a common compression pocket joined at a mesh zone). In one implementation, the male rotor is coaxial with an electric driving motor and is supported by bearings on inlet and outlet sides of its lobed working portion. There may be multiple female rotors engaged to a given male rotor or vice versa.
When one of the interlobe spaces is exposed to an inlet port, the refrigerant enters the space essentially at suction pressure. As the rotors continues to rotate, at some point during the rotation the space is no longer in communication with the inlet port and the flow of refrigerant to the space is cut off. After the inlet port is closed, the refrigerant is compressed as the rotors continue to rotate. At some point during the rotation, each space intersects the associated outlet port and the closed compression process terminates. The inlet port and the outlet port may each be radial, axial, or a hybrid combination of an axial port and a radial port.
As the refrigerant is compressed along a compression path between the inlet and outlet ports, sealing between the rotors and housing is desirable for efficient operation. To increase the mass flow in a screw compressor an economizer is used. Typical economizer ports are located along the rotor length, positioned to become exposed to the compression pockets just after such pockets are shut off from the associated suction ports. At this location the refrigerant gas trapped within the rotors is near suction pressure. Connecting gas at a pressure above suction to the economizer ports allows for a quantity of gas to flow into the compressor. Furthermore, the feeding of gas into the rotors after suction is cut off increases the pressure of the trapped gas in the rotors. This reduces the amount of work required by the compressor. Also the economizer flow is above suction pressure, so the power for a given total refrigerant mass flow is reduced.
The suction port for a screw compressor can be axial, radial or a combination of both. The radial suction port cutoff is defined by the bore surrounding the rotor. The axial port is closed by the meshing of the screw rotors. Typical designs with both axial and radial suction ports require that the axial port be closed before or at the same time the radial port is closed.
To make the compressor more compact, shorter screw rotors are desirable. Also, using multiple female rotors about a single male rotor or multiple male rotors about a single female rotor may result in a shorter rotor set. By shortening the length of the rotors, the compression path gets shorter, which minimizes the opportunity and time required/available to inject economizer flow into the rotors.
Nevertheless, there remains room for improvement in the art.
To reduce the length of the rotors, but increase the length of the compression process, the radial suction port needs to be closed off sooner. However, by reducing the radial suction, the rotors would not mesh in time to close off the axial suction port. It would be desirable to close off the axial suction port to allow for a shorter radial suction port. Advantageously this would only close off a portion of the axial suction port to avoid having the economizer flow leak back to suction and to still allow for an axial suction flow component.
One aspect of the invention is a compressor having a housing assembly containing male and female rotors. The male rotor has a screw-type male body portion extending from a first end to a second end and held within the housing assembly for rotation about a first rotor axis. The female rotor has a screw-type female body portion enmeshed with the male body portion. The female body portion extends from a first end to a second end and is held within the housing assembly for rotation about a second rotor axis. An end seal has a first surface engaging the female rotor body portion first end and being asymmetric around the second axis.
In various implementations, the end seal may include a full-annulus base portion encircling the second rotor axis and a second portion bearing the first surface. The first surface may be essentially an annular segment of an extent between 30° and 270°. The first surface may be of only partial circumferential extent. The first surface may seal 1/12 to ¾ of a lobe-swept area of said female body portion first end. The first surface may seal ¼ to ½ of the lobe-swept area. A motor may be coupled to the male rotor to drive the male rotor at least in a first direction about the first rotor axis. The male rotor and motor may be coaxial. The motor may be an electric motor having a rotor and a stator and the male rotor may have a shaft portion extending into and secured to the motor's rotor. The end seal may be essentially unitarily formed of steel. A number of threaded fasteners may secure the end seal to the housing assembly.
Another aspect of the invention involves a compressor having a housing assembly, enmeshed male and female rotors, and suction and discharge plenums. The male and female rotor body portions may cooperate with the housing to define at least a first compression path between the suction plenum and the discharge plenum. An economizer port is at an intermediate location along the first compression path. The compressor includes means for resisting leakage from the economizer port to the suction plenum while still permitting an axial flow component from the suction plenum.
The means may comprise a rotor end seal with a circumferentially non-constant rotor engagement face. The rotor end seal may include a full-annulus base portion encircling the second rotor axis and a second portion bearing the rotor engagement face. The rotor engagement face may be essentially an annular segment of an extent between 30° and 270°. The means may comprise a rotor end seal with a rotor engagement face of only partial circumferential extent. A second female rotor may have a screw-type female lobed body portion and may mesh with the male lobed body portion.
Another aspect of the invention involves a method for remanufacturing a compressor or engineering or reengineering a configuration of such compressor from a baseline condition to a second condition. The method includes providing an axial seal for sealing with a female rotor first end. The axial seal has a sealing surface asymmetric around a female rotor axis. The axial seal either replaces a baseline seal having a sealing surface symmetric around such axis or is located where there is no axial seal in the baseline condition. The compressor may include an economizer port.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
In the exemplary embodiment, the motor 24 is an electric motor having a rotor and a stator. A portion of the first shaft stub 39 of the male rotor 26 extends within the stator and is secured thereto so as to permit the motor 24 to drive the male rotor 26 about the axis 500. When so driven in an operative first direction about the axis 500, the male rotor drives the female rotors in an opposite second direction about their axes 501 and 502.
Surfaces of the housing combine with the enmeshed rotor bodies to define inlet and outlet ports to two pairs of compression pockets compressing and driving refrigerant from a suction (inlet) plenum 60 to a discharge (outlet) plenum 62. A first pair of male and female compression pockets is formed by the housing, male rotor, and the first female rotor. A second pair of male and female compression pockets is formed by the housing, male rotor and the second female rotor. In each pair, one such pocket is located between a pair of adjacent lobes of each rotor associated rotor. Depending on the implementation, the ports may be radial, axial, or a hybrid of the two.
The main body downstream surface 158 (rotor engagement face) has a radial and circumferential extent sufficient to seal the interlobe spaces along the associated leakage path 98 (e.g., along the portions 102; 104 and along a remaining lobe pocket area in communication with those portions 102; 104 (e.g., as shown in
One or more embodiments of the present invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, when applied as a reengineering or remanufacturing of an existing compressor, details of the existing compressor may influence or dictate details of the particular implementation. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This is the 35 USC 371 National Stage Application of PCT/US2004/033421 which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/956,897, filed Sep. 30, 2004 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,121,814.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2004/033421 | 10/6/2004 | WO | 00 | 1/3/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/041494 | 4/20/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070286758 A1 | Dec 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10956897 | Sep 2004 | US |
Child | 11631562 | US |