The invention relates to compressors. More particularly, the invention relates to refrigerant compressors.
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 continue 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.
It is often desirable to temporarily reduce the refrigerant mass flow through the compressor by delaying the closing off of the inlet port when full capacity operation is not required. Such unloading is often provided by a slide valve having a moveable port element with one or more portions whose positions (as the valve is translated) control the respective suction side closing and discharge side opening of the compression pockets. The primary effect of an unloading shift of the slide valve is to reduce the initial trapped suction volume (and hence compressor capacity). Exemplary slide valves are disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 20040109782 A1 and U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,249,866 and 6,302,668. In a typical such compressor, the slide valve element is mounted for reciprocal movement in a partially circular bore parallel to the rotor bores.
According to one aspect of the invention, a screw compressor has at least a first rotor at least partially within a bore of a housing. A slide valve element is positioned at least partially within a channel in the housing and has a first surface facing the first rotor. The slide valve element includes a body and a coating on the body. The coating forms the first surface.
In various implementations the coating may have the characteristic thickness of at least 0.015 mm. The coating may be softer than a principal material of the first rotor. The coating may comprise a metal-organic mix. The coating may comprise a metallic coating. The coating may comprise a non-metallic coating. The slide valve may be linearly translatable through a continuum of positions so as to provide a continuous volume index adjustment between first and second indices. A second rotor may be enmeshed with the first rotor. The coating may also form a second surface of the slide valve element facing the second rotor. The housing may include a body portion with a channel accommodating the valve element and a cover plate covering the channel and retaining the valve element in the channel.
Another aspect of the invention involves a compressor having a housing and a first rotor at least partially within a bore of the housing. A slide valve element is at least partially within a channel in the housing. The channel extends through the housing body piece. A cover is secured to the housing body piece to close an outboard portion of the channel. The slide valve element has an inboard first portion and a second portion outboard of the first portion and wider than the first portion. The slide valve second portion is accommodated within the channel outboard portion.
Another aspect of the invention involves a method including applying a coating to a slide valve element body. The slide valve element is installed to a housing of a screw compressor. At least one rotor of the screw compressor is driven so as to wear down the coating.
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 is an electric motor having a rotor and a stator. One of the shaft stubs of one of the rotors 26 and 28 may be coupled to the motor's rotor so as to permit the motor to drive that rotor about its axis. When so driven in an operative first direction about the axis, the rotor drives the other rotor in an opposite second direction. The exemplary housing assembly 22 includes a rotor housing 48 having an upstream/inlet end face 49 approximately midway along the motor length and a downstream/discharge end face 50 essentially coplanar with the rotor body ends 32 and 36. Many other configurations are possible.
The exemplary housing assembly 22 further comprises a motor/inlet housing 52 having a compressor inlet/suction port 53 at an upstream end and having a downstream face 54 mounted to the rotor housing upstream face 49 (e.g., by bolts through both housing pieces). The assembly 22 further includes a discharge housing 56 having an upstream face 57 mounted to the rotor housing downstream face 50 and having a discharge port 58. The exemplary rotor housing 48, motor/inlet housing 52, and discharge housing 56 may each be formed as castings subject to further finish machining.
Surfaces of the housing assembly 22 combine with the enmeshed rotor bodies 30 and 34 to define inlet and outlet ports to compression pockets compressing and driving a refrigerant flow 504 from a suction (inlet) plenum 60 to a discharge (outlet) plenum 62 (
For capacity control/unloading, the compressor has a slide valve 100 (
In the exemplary slide valve, shifts between the two positions are driven by a combination of spring force and fluid pressure. A main spring 120 biases the valve element from the loaded to the unloaded positions. In the exemplary valve, the spring 120 is a metal coil spring surrounding a shaft 122 coupling the valve element to a piston 124. The piston is mounted within a bore (interior) 126 of a cylinder 128 formed in a slide case element 130 attached to the discharge housing 56. The shaft passes through an aperture 132 in the discharge housing 56. The spring is compressed between an underside 134 of the piston and the discharge housing 56. A proximal portion 136 of the cylinder interior is in pressure-balancing fluid communication with the discharge plenum via clearance between the aperture and shaft. A headspace 138 is coupled via electronically-controlled solenoid valves (not shown schematically) to a high pressure fluid source (not shown schematically) at or near discharge conditions (e.g., to an oil separator). Other actuators (e.g., direct solenoid actuation, direct hydraulic actuation, drive screw actuation, and the like) are possible.
In the exemplary embodiment, the slide valve element is held substantially within a channel in the housing. The exemplary channel 200 spans portions of the rotor case 48 and discharge housing 56 and is laterally defined by stepped sidewalls 202 and 204 (
The exemplary valve element 102 includes a unitarily-formed metallic body 268 with a deformable coating 270 (
The material 270 is formed atop (e.g., as a built-up coating) the surfaces 272 and 274 prior to assembly and may have an initial surface contour 280 effective to interfere with the bodies 30 and 34. Rotation of the lobed rotor bodies 30 and 34 will thus be effective to abrade the material 270 to create cylindrical surfaces 282 and 284 along the lobe-swept periphery. An exemplary post-abrasion thickness of the material 270 is 0.010-0.100 mm (more narrowly 0.010-0.025 mm). An exemplary as-applied thickness may be 25% or more greater on average (e.g., 25-100%). Exemplary material is an aluminum-polymer amalgam applied by a spray coating process. Alternative metallic coatings include aluminum foams and zinc-nickel electroplatings. Alternative non-metallic coatings include resinous and other polymeric coatings.
Use of the material 270 permits greater manufacturing tolerance (e.g., in one or all of position, shape/roundness, and finish) for the surfaces 272 and 274 relative to corresponding surfaces of an uncoated valve element. Thus the nominal positions of the surfaces 272 and 274 may be shifted slightly outward relative to the rotor bore surfaces 276 and 278, respectively.
Other cost savings may be introduced by mounting the valve element in an open channel (closed by the cover plate 252) rather than in a circular bore intersecting the rotor bores. The precise machining of flat surfaces may be easier than the machining of the circular cylindrical surfaces. Furthermore, especially if combined with use of the abradable material 270, less precision is needed.
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, the principles may be implemented as a modification of an existing compressor configuration. In such an implementation, details of the existing configuration may influence details of the particular implementation. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2005/031992 | 9/7/2005 | WO | 00 | 1/30/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/030114 | 3/15/2007 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080206086 A1 | Aug 2008 | US |