The disclosure relates to compressors. More particularly, the disclosure relates to pulsation control in screw compressors.
Gas pulsations generated in screw compressors are a dominant contributor to noise of current and future vapor compression systems such as chillers (e.g., both air-cooled and water-cooled). Pulsations generated at the discharge of the screw rotors propagate as refrigerant-borne waves through the compressor discharge line to downstream chiller components, exciting structural vibration which causes air-borne sound/noise. Similarly, the refrigerant-borne pulsations within the compressor plenum cause the compressor housing to vibrate and radiate sound.
Prior technologies for controlling gas pulsations in screw compressors include external mufflers installed in the compressor discharge line as well as mufflers integrated with the compressor. Examples of mufflers integrated with the compressor are described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,016,071, Sep. 13, 2011, and International Publication No. WO/2001/066946 (Application No. PCT/EP2001/002578), Sep. 13, 2001.
One aspect of the disclosure involves a compressor comprising a housing assembly having a plurality of ports including a suction port and a discharge port. A male rotor is mounted for rotation about an axis. A female rotor is enmeshed with the male rotor and mounted in the housing for rotation about an axis for drawing a flow from the suction port, compressing the flow, and discharging the compressed flow through the discharge port. A cavity group is between the discharge port and the male rotor and female rotor. The cavity group comprises a first member separating a plurality of cells and a foraminate cover member atop the first member.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the cavity group is a resonator group.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the first member is a unitary single piece first member.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the foraminate cover is a flat plate.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the foraminate cover has a characteristic thickness and holes of characteristic diameter between 1.0 times and 2.0 times said characteristic thickness.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, there are at least ten holes per cavity for a plurality of the cavities.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the characteristic thickness is 1.5 mm to 3.0 mm.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the discharge port is transversely offset from a discharge valve seat opening so as to be non-overlapping in axial projection.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the cavity group is at a discharge end of a bearing case.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the first member is mounted to the discharge end of the bearing case.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, a motor is contained by the housing.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the cells are unfilled.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the cells have hydraulic diameters of 10 mm to 50 mm.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the cavity group is a first cavity group and the compressor further comprises a second cavity group between the discharge port and the male rotor and female rotor. The second cavity group is positioned opposite the first cavity group about a flowpath through the compressor and comprises: a unitary single-piece first member separating a plurality of cells; and a foraminate cover member atop the first member.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, a separation between the first cavity group and the second cavity group is 20 mm to 60 mm.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the respective cover members of the first cavity group and the second cavity group are parallel.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the respective cover members of the first cavity group and the second cavity group are orthogonal to the rotation axes of the male rotor and female rotor.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, a central barrier splits a flowpath along the cavity group.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the central barrier projects from a discharge cover toward the cavity group.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the cavity group is along a flowpath between a discharge plenum in a bearing case and the discharge port and the discharge port is offset from a downstream end of the discharge plenum transversely to rotation axes of the one or more working elements.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves a vapor compression system comprising the compressor, and further comprising: a heat rejection heat exchanger; a heat absorption heat exchanger; and a flowpath from the discharge port sequentially through the heat rejection heat exchanger and heat absorption heat exchanger and returning to the suction port.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the vapor compression system is a chiller.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, a method for operating the compressor or vapor compression system comprises: driving rotation of the male rotor and the female rotor to draw the flow from the suction port, compress the flow, and discharge the compressed flow through the discharge port; and the compressed flow passing along the cavity group.
In one or more embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments, the cavity group acts as a resonator array to partially cancel pulsations.
The details of one or more embodiments are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
The exemplary rotors are supported for rotation about their respective axes by one or more bearings (e.g., rolling element bearings) along shaft portions protruding from opposite ends of each such rotor working portion. In an exemplary embodiment, upstream end bearings 50 and 52, respectively, are mounted in associated compartments in a main casting (main case member) 54 of the case assembly which forms a rotor case and the body of a motor case. The rotor case portion defines respective bores 56 and 58 accommodating the lobed working portions. At an upstream end of the motor case portion, a motor case cover or endplate 60 encloses the motor case and provides the inlet port such as via an integral fitting 62. The exemplary cover 60 is secured to the upstream end of the main case member 54 via a bolt circle extending through bolting flanges of the two.
At the downstream end of the main case member 54, the case assembly includes a separate bearing case member (discharge end bearing case) 70 which has bearing compartments in which the respective discharge end bearings 72 and 74 of the male rotor and female rotor are mounted. A discharge case (cover or endplate) 80 may cover the bearing case 70 and may provide the discharge port such as via a fitting 82 (
In operation, the exemplary flowpath 510 through the compressor passes from the suction port 24 through the motor case (around and/or through the motor), into a suction plenum 100 (
To further guide flow, the flapper 105 of the valve 106 may have an unusually restricted range of motion.
Several further features help reduce the effect of initial pulsations. One such further feature is the location of resonators 116 and 118 (
The third feature for limiting the effects of pulsations is the addition, in the inlet end face of the discharge cover, of a barrier 160 (
The particular parameters of the resonator recess size and shape (lateral dimensions, depth, and the like) and aperture size (transverse dimensions and potentially plate thickness) and distribution may be tailored via experimental methods or via computer simulation. Cavity size may be selected based on the range of sound frequencies (or wavelengths λ) sought to be countered. Exemplary hydraulic diameter is 0.25 times to 0.50 times λ. Such selection of hydraulic diameter may be done by the designer directly of may be programmed into a computer-aided engineering process or may result from the computer-aided engineering process. An exemplary λ is based on the frequency. An exemplary frequency is the number of compression pocket openings to discharge per unit of time at an operational speed of the compressor. Additional relevant frequencies are the harmonics of those frequencies. λ is the speed of sound divided by the frequency. Hydraulic diameter of at least one cavity may be selected for each of a plurality of respective λ in the target operating range of the compressor. Exemplary sound speed will depend on the particular refrigerant and the discharge pressure. Exemplary refrigerants include R134a and R1234ze. Exemplary number of compression pocket openings per second is 140 Hz to 700 Hz with harmonics then extending the upper range of frequency to about 5 kHz (e.g., seven times the exemplary 700 Hz).
Exemplary thickness for the plates 130 and 132 is 1.0 mm to 5 mm, more particularly, 1.5 mm to 3.0 mm. In general, lower values are more desirable but subject to thresholds for robustness and lack of vibration themselves. Exemplary hole diameter (or other characterization transverse dimension if non-circular holes are used) is between 0.5 times and 4.0 times the plate thickness, more particularly, between 1.0 times and 2.0 times. Thus, exemplary diameters would be 1.5 mm to 6.0 mm given the example above or 1.5 mm to 3.0 mm. There may me multiple holes/apertures for each cell (e.g. at least ten or twenty per cell). The exemplary aperture plates have a continuous array of the holes spanning all the associated cells. Other configurations might group the apertures with specific cells. Exemplary arrays are regular arrays such as square, rhomboidal, or hexagonal.
The exemplary cavities function a multi-modal non-linear resonators. In contrast with a Helmholtz resonator, the cavity dimensions are designed to be acoustically non-compact over the range of relevant frequencies (e.g., a portion of the operational range targeted for dissipation). This allows both transverse (side-to-side) and longitudinal (front-to-back) modes. This is in contrast with Helmholtz resonators where cavity dimensions are acoustically compact, and in contrast with conventional quarter-wave resonators where longitudinal modes drive resonances. As a result, a much broad attenuation bandwidth may be obtained.
Nevertheless, at lower speeds, the exemplary resonators may begin to act as Helmholtz resonators.
In addition, the exemplary resonators make use of on non-linear frequency coupling. This is achieved through the selection of small hole size and distribution/density (open area ratio) to achieve high-velocity jetting in the non-linear flow regime. As a result significant energy dissipation is achieved via turbulent mixing at both resonant and non-resonant frequencies, further increasing attenuation bandwidth.
To maximize the exposure of refrigerant flow to the resonators, the spacing between the plates 130 and 132 (between their respective adjacent faces along the flowpath) may preferably be small but not to the point or unduly restricting fluid flow and thereby compromising efficiency. Thus, exemplary separation is 10 mm to 100 mm or 20 mm to 60 mm.
Exemplary recess depth is 2 mm to 50 mm or 3 mm to 35 mm or 5 mm to 25 mm. This may be measured as an average (e.g., mean or median, value) or at a single location. Exemplary transverse recess dimensions are characterized by cavity hydraulic diameter with exemplary embodiments having ranges of hydraulic diameters of 5 mm to 60 mm, or 10 mm to 50 mm, or 18 mm to 42 mm.
The combination of recess planform and aperture size and distribution may cause the apertures to cover an exemplary 5% to 30% or 6% to 20% of the planform of the recesses (the open area percentage). As is discussed below, this open area percentage or ratio may be a parameter optimized for performance over a give target operational condition range.
Additionally, various different compressor configurations may be used including compressors with economizer ports, three-rotor compressors, and the like. Although the exemplary compressor is shown having an unloading piston 190 (
Also, although unfilled resonator cells are shown, the possibility exists of filling with a porous media such as glass or polymeric fiber, polymeric foam, expanded bead material (e.g., expanded polypropylene), and the like. The filling may compromise the pure resonator function but may make up for it via damping or other attenuation. Thus, the resonators may more broadly be characterized as cavities because they may have non-resonator functionality.
Yet another variation involves multi-layer resonators. One example of a compressor 600 (
Thus, the planform of the intact portions of the plates 630 and 632 may correspond to the planform layout of the underlying walls separating cells in the resonators 620, 622. For each of the thick plates 630 and 632, a single set of fasteners (e.g., screws) may send through that plate and the associated foraminate plates along both of its respective faces and into the adjacent case component 682 and 680. It is thus seen that the exemplary compressor 600 has a slightly different arrangement of major case components reflecting a slightly different baseline compressor. Thus, the discharge valve is not mounted in the bearing case 670 but rather mounted in an additional case member 682 intervening between the bearing case 670 and the discharge case 680 and dividing the cells of the resonators 620.
In an exemplary reengineering from a baseline compressor without such resonators, the compressor 600 may necessitate a lengthening of the discharge housing 680 to accommodate the longitudinal space occupied by the additional resonator layers. Otherwise, construction details and techniques may be similar to those described above for the first compressor and to any baseline compressor.
The compressor and chiller system may be made using otherwise conventional or yet-developed materials and techniques.
The use of “first”, “second”, and the like in the description and following claims is for differentiation within the claim only and does not necessarily indicate relative or absolute importance or temporal order. Similarly, the identification in a claim of one element as “first” (or the like) does not preclude such “first” element from identifying an element that is referred to as “second” (or the like) in another claim or in the description.
One or more embodiments have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made. For example, when applied to an existing basic system, details of such configuration or its associated use may influence details of particular implementations. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Benefit is claimed of U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 62/236,206, filed Oct. 2, 2015, and entitled “Screw Compressor Resonator Arrays”, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety as if set forth at length.
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