The present invention relates to a covered artificial skating rink comprising a closed building, such as a tent or a dome built over a slab intended to be covered with ice. Said slab intended to be covered with ice (frozen water) thus allows the practice of any type of winter sport, such as skating, curling, ice hockey, etc.
Several types of artificial skating rinks are known that have slabs, made of various materials, comprising refrigeration devices in order to sufficiently cool water spread on the slab surface to turn it into ice.
In some known embodiments, such slabs comprise a layer incorporating channels for circulating a refrigerant fluid, such as a liquid coolant, disposed in a network and connected to a refrigerating set which circulates a liquid refrigerant in said circulation channels.
In order to limit the inevitable cooling losses created by refrigerating sets, it is known to thermally insulate the slab by providing to dispose, between the latter and the primary floor, a layer of thermal insulation. The absence of such a layer of thermal insulation results in substantial heat losses. In some cases, hot water is run under this insulating layer to prevent the primary floor from freezing.
However, despite these measures, the artificial skating rinks known in the prior art are characterised by substantial heat losses requiring the continuous operation, i.e. day and night, of high-power and, hence, costly refrigeration sets. Furthermore, it is difficult to keep the ice in good condition since the top surface thereof is in contact with the ambient air of the skating rink, which is often humid, on account of the presence of skaters and the public.
Moreover, ice skating and its derivatives (hockey, figure skating, etc.) are increasingly popular activities and an increase in the number of skating rinks built can be observed worldwide, more specifically in certain countries in Asia.
Unfortunately, as mentioned above, a skating rink requires a substantial quantity of continuous energy to keep a large quantity of water in ice form, so that people can skate under good conditions.
This energy consumption is especially substantial in countries having hot and/or tropical climates, wherein outdoor temperatures are usually greater than 20° C. and rarely below 0° C.
One of the aims of the present invention is hence that of remedying the drawbacks cited above, and of providing a covered artificial skating rink making it possible in particular to make use for example of a solar panel array for storing the energy produced in the daytime to maintain ice quality at night, in order to retain ice of constant quality over the entire skating surface, and which has a simple and reliable design, with a relatively moderate running cost, particularly more economical in terms of the energy consumption thereof.
The present invention also covers the use of phase-change materials incorporated in a reserve external to the skating rink floor.
Thus, the present invention makes it possible to create a novel type of skating rink using intermittent energy sources, for example solar panels.
Said invention is therefore a covered artificial skating rink composed of a closed building built over a slab intended to be covered with ice, characterised in that the skating rink comprises:
The present invention proposes to dispose the slab of the skating rink on an additional layer incorporating phase-change materials serving as a “refrigeration reserve” to help maintain the quality of the layer of ice for a sufficient time, particularly to allow the shutdown of the compressors of the refrigeration device at night.
It will be noted that phase-change material (or PCM) denotes any material capable of changing physical state within a restricted, preferably negative, temperature range, for example around −15 degrees Celsius.
It will be noted that refrigerant fluid (or coolant) denotes a fluid allowing the implementation of a refrigeration cycle. Said fluid can be pure or be a mixture of fluids in liquid, gas phase or both according to the temperature and pressure conditions. The fluid advantageously absorbs heat at low temperature and low pressure, then releases heat at a higher temperature and pressure, for example upon a change of physical state.
According to another possible feature, the phase-change material(s) can be contained in tanks placed under the slab with an “expansion space” making it possible to withstand, without noteworthy deformation, the change of volume following the phase change.
According to another possible feature, cooling of the phase-change materials can be obtained directly by the refrigerant network wherein the refrigerant fluid (for example glycol) disposed under the slab circulates or by another separate refrigerant network.
According to another possible feature, the device comprises at least two layers:
According to another possible feature, the first layer rests directly on said second layer.
It will be noted that “directly” denotes that the heat transfers between the first and second layers are not altered by an ancillary element, and therefore that the thermal conductivity is essentially based on the respective thermal conductivity values of the first and second layers.
According to another possible feature, said slab comprises a third layer, referred to as intermediate layer, separating the first layer from the second layer.
According to another possible feature, the third layer in turn comprises two levels:
According to another possible feature, the refrigeration network comprises one or more tubes passing through said second layer and/or third layer.
According to another possible feature, said slab comprises a layer of thermal insulation.
According to another possible feature, the phase-change material has a melting point between −5° C. and −25° C., and preferably between −10° C. and −20° C.
According to another possible feature, the skating rink comprises photovoltaic panels intended to power said refrigeration device electrically.
According to another possible feature, said refrigerant fluid comprises glycol.
According to another possible feature, said skating rink comprises an electrical storage battery.
According to another possible feature, said building is thermally insulated, particularly via thermally insulating materials.
According to another possible feature, the refrigeration device is configured to be powered at least in part by said photovoltaic panels and/or by said storage battery.
According to another possible feature, the refrigeration device includes at least one operating mode wherein said refrigeration device only cools the air located above the slab covered with ice.
The pumps, compressors and other means of said refrigeration device make it possible to circulate the refrigerant fluid are therefore switched off to save energy, the phase-change material making it possible to keep the ice at a temperature below the melting point thereof.
The invention will be better understood, and other aims, details, features and advantages thereof will appear more clearly throughout the following description of particular embodiments of the invention, given only for illustrative and non-limiting purposes, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Said skating rink 1 is a covered artificial skating rink composed of a closed building 3 built over a slab 5 intended to be covered with ice 7.
Said skating rink 1 particularly comprises:
Said phase-change material 13 is particularly configured to keep the ice covering the slab 5 at a temperature below the melting point of the ice, generally around 0° C. For this, said phase-change material 13 has a melting point between −5° C. and −25° C., and preferably between −10° C. and −20° C.
Said skating rink 1 advantageously comprises photovoltaic (or solar) panels 15 and an electrical energy storage battery. Said photovoltaic panels 15 are disposed on the roof of the building of the skating rink 1 or are integrated in a solar roof.
The refrigeration device 9 is for example a set of heat exchangers, pump(s), compressor(s), and tubes 11a of the refrigerant network 11 making it possible to carry out a thermodynamic cycle (such as a Carnot, Rankine cycle, etc.) wherein calories are exchanged between the interior and the exterior of the skating rink 1. The pump or the compressor of said refrigeration device 9 particularly circulates the refrigerant fluid in said heat exchangers and the tubes 11a of the refrigerant network 11.
More specifically, the refrigeration device 9 is configured to discharge calories outside the skating rink 1, so that the refrigerant fluid optimally captures the calories stored in the slab 5, particularly when said refrigerant fluid circulates in the tubes 11a located in the slab 5.
Said photovoltaic panels 15, for their part, can supply the different elements of the skating rink 1 consuming electrical energy, particularly the refrigeration device 9 and its sub-elements, with electricity. Furthermore, if the electrical production of the photovoltaic panels 15 is greater than the electricity consumption of the skating rink 1, a storage battery is configured to store the excess energy thus generated for subsequent use, for example at night when sunshine is lacking.
Said slab 5 thus comprises:
This first embodiment is referred to as “direct embodiment”, because the first layer 20 rests directly on the second layer 30, i.e. there are no intermediate layers between the first layer 20 and the second layer 30.
The second layer 30 comprises a thickness of phase-change material 13 and is traversed by tubes 11a of the refrigerant network 11.
The first layer 20, for its part, is made of a material adapted to be clamped between a layer of ice 7 and the second layer 30. “Adapted” material denotes a material having mechanical characteristics rendering it capable of withstanding (therefore without cracking and/or deforming) the stress exerted by the layer of ice 7 and the second layer 30, particularly volume variations due to thermal expansion of the layer of ice 7 and the second layer 30.
A layer of thermal insulation 60 is advantageously disposed below the second layer 30, in order to thermally insulate the support layer 20 and the layer of phase-change material 30 from the exterior of the skating rink 1 (and also from the primary floor).
It will be noted that the identical or similar elements thus bear the same references as in the figures of the previous embodiments and will therefore not be detailed again.
Thus, said slab 5′ comprises:
More specifically, said third layer 40 itself comprises two levels 42 and 44:
As above, tubes 11a forming the refrigerant network 11 pass through the second layer 30, i.e. said tubes 11a are embedded in the phase-change material 13. Furthermore, tubes 11a forming the network 11 also pass through the third layer 40. The tubes 11a are advantageously configured so that the refrigerant fluid, transported through these tubes 11a, first flows through the second layer 30, then through the third layer 40 (the aim being to cool the fluid before it passes through the third layer).
Regardless of the embodiment of the slab 5, 5′, the building of the skating rink 1 is closed and thermally insulated, for example by means of a heat-insulating material.
Advantageously, the refrigeration device 9 comprises an air-conditioning system configured to cool the air located above the slab 5, 5′ of the skating rink 1.
Furthermore, the refrigeration device 9 is configured to have at least two operating modes:
When the second operating mode is implemented, the pump(s) and compressors of said refrigeration device 9 are shut down, to minimise the electrical consumption of the skating rink.
Thus, “night mode” makes it possible to store frigories in the phase-change material 13. The frigories thus stored can be used subsequently, for example in the daytime, when there are skaters on the slab 5, 5′ and it is not possible to sufficiently cool the air above the layer of ice intended for skating.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| FR2103962 | Apr 2021 | FR | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/IB2022/053572 | 4/15/2022 | WO |