1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a snow making apparatus comprising at least one water/air nozzel which is adapted to eject a water/air mixture. The invention further relates to a method of operating a snow making apparatus.
2. Description of the Related Art
Snow making apparatuses (so-called “snow cannons”) of various configurations are used in winter sports areas. DE 196 27 586 A1 gives an overview of known types of construction of snow making apparatuses. These include, in particular, high-pressure cannons close to the ground, high-pressure cannons of a lance type of construction (tower construction) and low-pressure cannons with a propeller.
High-pressure cannons close to the ground use compressed air to produce a water/air mist which is expelled at high speed in order to achieve the desired throwing range and active cooling due to rapid air expansion. Considerable quantities of compressed air are required. A central compressor is generally provided for a plurality of cannons, the compressor having a power rating of, for example, 15 to 20 kW.
With high-pressure cannons of lance form, the water/air nozzles are arranged at a height of 8 to 12 m above the piste. Lower expulsion rates may be employed, owing to the prolonged falling path. Therefore, the air compressor may have only, for a high-pressure cannon, a relatively low power rating of, for example, 5 kW per lance. A cannon of this design is shown in DE 196 27 586 A1.
With low-pressure cannons, a propeller produces a main air stream into which freezing nuclei are sprayed by means of nucleator nozzles and small water droplets are spayed by means of water nozzles. The nucleator nozzles are constructed as water/air nozzles. They are operated with compressed air and water under pressure and atomise a water/air mixture. The compressed air relaxes as it issues from the nucleator nozzles and thus cools water droplets of the water/air mixture to well below the freezing point so that small ice crystals are formed. The droplets discharged by the water nozzles settle on these freezing nuclei and thus form the snow crystal. With cannons of this design, compressed air which typically, as with the other designs mentioned, has to have a pressure of approximately 4 to 10 bar is required only for the nucleator nozzles. A compressed air power rating of about 4 to 5.5 kW is typically required. DE 41 31 857 A1 shows one such snow cannon with a screw compressor flanged on to the main motor.
With all the designs described hitherto, the snow making apparatus requires compressed air which has to be provided by a local or central compressor. This causes additional, considerable energy consumption. The compressor increases the production costs, requires maintenance and causes noise. In addition, proper working is not always ensured, in particular, at low temperatures. A compressor mounted on the snow making apparatus increases the weight thereof by about 120 kg, whereas a central compressor necessitates the laying of compressed air lines.
DE 44 23 124 A1 discloses a snow making apparatus of a propeller type of construction, which does not require an additional source of compressed air. The freezing nuclei are formed here by an auxiliary nozzle which is arranged in the main air stream. With this apparatus, which is dependent on the propeller type of construction, a propeller drive has to be provided that is dimensioned correspondingly more powerful.
Broadly speaking, the present invention avoids the drawbacks described above by providing, in one embodiment, a snow making apparatus which does not require an air compressor or only requires an air compressor with a relatively low output. Advantages of the snow making apparatus will become apparent from the following detailed description, and may include, without limitation, efficient use of energy, which is wasted and converted into heat in snow making apparatuses according to the prior art; low production costs; light weight; high reliability, and requiring only minimal maintenance.
The present invention can be implemented in numerous ways, including as a process, an apparatus, a system, a device, or a method. Several embodiments of the present invention are described below.
In one embodiment, a snow making apparatus is provided. The snow making apparatus includes at least one water/air nozzle which is adapted to eject a water/air mixture. The snow making apparatus comprises at least one jet pump which operates with water as a driving medium, and mixes air with the water and compresses the water/air mixture in order to form the water/air mixture which is supplied to the at least one water/air nozzle.
In another embodiment, a method of operating a snow making apparatus is provided. The method includes producing a water/air mixture using at least one jet pump. The at least one jet pump operates with water as a driving fluid and the at least one jet pump compresses the air and mixes the air with the water. The method further includes ejecting the water/air mixture through at least one water/air nozzle.
In yet another embodiment, a method of operating a snow making apparatus is provided. The method includes producing a water/air mixture using at least one jet pump. The at least one jet pump operates with water as a driving fluid and the at least one jet pump mixes the air with the water and compresses the water/air mixture. The method further includes ejecting the water/air mixture through at least one water/air nozzle.
The invention embarks from the basic idea of using at least one jet pump (liquid jet gas compressor) for producing the water/air mixture expelled by at least one water/air nozzle. The jet pump operates without moving parts and is inexpensive, light and reliable. Ambient air or air which has been precompressed by a compressor is supplied to the jet pump, depending on the effective working pressure of the water available for the jet pump. In the first case, the air compressor which is usually required in the prior art is completely dispensed with; in the second case, the compressor may be correspondingly smaller and more cost-efficient in design.
The energy required to operate the jet pump is supplied to the snow making apparatus according to the invention via the operating pressure of the water supply. A surprising synergistic effect of the solution according to the invention is that energy which is wasted in prior art systems may be utilised on most snow making apparatuses in typical applications, namely for providing ski pistes with snow. This is because water is usually supplied to the snow making apparatuses arranged on a slope by a pump system located in the valley. The pump system supplies a pressure line which leads to the mountain and to which the snow making apparatuses are connected. The line pressure required for the snow making apparatus, for example 15 to 20 bar, must be available even at the highest point of the pressure line. Depending on the difference in height that the pressure line overcomes, the line pressure is much higher in the lower and middle region of the piste and is, for example, 40 to 80 bar or higher.
In systems according to the prior art, the connecting points of the pressure line comprise what are known as hydrants which correspondingly limit the operating pressure for the connected snow making apparatuses, in the manner of a throttle valve. The hydrants convert considerable amounts of energy into heat. For example, the throttle power is about 16 kW at a line pressure of 40 bar, an operating pressure of the snow making apparatus of 10 bar and a water consumption of 20 m3/h. This energy, which remains unused in systems according to the prior art, may be utilised by the invention.
As already mentioned, ambient air or already pre-compressed air may be supplied to each jet pump. In some configurations of the invention, at least one multi-stage jet pump is used in order to obtain particularly high air compression. The jet pump (or at least one stage of the multi-stage jet pump) preferably comprises a driving nozzle for the water, a suction nozzle for the air, a mixing chamber for mixing the water issuing from the driving nozzle with the air flowing through the suction nozzle, and a diffuser for compressing the water/air mixture. A swirl member is provided in the suction nozzle in some configurations.
In particularly preferred embodiments, more than 50% or more than 75% or more than 90% or substantially all of the water throughput of the snow making apparatus passes through the jet pump or jet pumps and is expelled through the water/air nozzle or the water/air nozzles as a water/air mixture. In these configurations, the energy provided by the water is utilised particularly well. Preferably, more than 50% or more than 75% or more than 90% or substantially all of the nozzles of the snow making apparatus are configured as water/air nozzles (in contrast to mere water nozzles as in low-pressure cannons according to the prior art). A particularly large quantity of freezing nuclei is then produced.
To achieve particularly good compression of the water/air mixture, the effective working pressure of each jet pump, (i.e. the pressure difference which is available to the jet pump and is often also described as the effective driving fluid pressure) is preferably at least 10 bar or at least 20 bar or at least 30 bar. In preferred configurations, the snow making apparatus is preferably adapted for unthrottled or direct connection to a water pressure line having a line pressure of more than 20 bar or more than 30 bar or more than 40 bar.
In preferred configurations, the at least one jet pump comprises a nozzle needle for varying the water throughput and/or the mixing ratio of the expelled water/air mixture (and therefore the constitution of the snow produced). The nozzle needle may be adjusted by a motor or manually, taking into account, in particular, ambient parameters such as temperature, air humidity, etc. In some further developed configurations, the nozzle needle has an axial bore to increase the air throughput of the jet pump.
In further advantageous configurations of the invention, during operation of the snow making apparatus, different water/air nozzles or groups of water/air nozzles may simultaneously be supplied with water/air mixtures having different mixing ratios. This measure leads to snow having particularly good qualities. The water/air mixtures may be produced by jet pumps having different constructions or adjustments, or they may be derived from a single jet pump (for example at different points of the mixing chamber or diffuser).
To enable the water throughput to be adapted step-by-step to the requirements of snow production and environmental conditions, a plurality of water/air nozzles that may individually be turned on and/or a plurality of groups of water/air nozzles that may individually be turned on are provided in preferred configurations. These nozzles or nozzle groups may be connectable to an individual jet pump or to a group of jet pumps via a distributor. Preferably, however, at least one respective individual jet pump is provided for each nozzle or nozzle group that may individually be turned on.
The snow making apparatus according to the invention may be configured in any known type of construction. In particular, variants with a lance type of construction and as a propeller machine are provided. With the propeller type of construction, the snow making apparatus preferably comprises a motor-driven propeller for producing a main air stream, and the water/air nozzles are arranged in one or more nozzle rings so that they discharge the water/air mixture into the main air stream. With the lance type of construction, a vertical or oblique lance rod of which the end remote from the ground comprises a nozzle head with one or more water/air nozzles is provided in preferred configurations. The at least one jet pump may be arranged at the nozzle head or at the end of the lance rod close to the ground. The lance rod is preferably constructed as a pipe through which the water supply is conveyed in the first case and the water/air mixture is conveyed in the second case.
In preferred configurations, the method according to the invention is developed by features which correspond to the aforementioned features and/or the features mentioned in the dependent apparatus claims.
Further features, advantages and objects of the invention will emerge from the following description of a plurality of embodiments and variants. Reference is made to the schematic drawings, in which:
The basic sketch in
During operation of the snow making apparatus, water W is supplied to the jet pump 10 via a pressure line (not shown) at a pressure of about 25 to 40 bar or higher. The water W serves as a driving medium here; the path of the driving water stream is designated by a continuous arrow in
The water/air mixture M now passes to the water/air nozzles 12 through which it is expelled (the flow path of the mixture M is indicated by the dot-dash arrows in
The snow making apparatus shown in
A nozzle module 30 connected to the outlet side of the main tube 24 contains a number of water/air nozzles 12 (
The front view in
The enlarged view of the pump module in
Whereas all jet pumps 10 are always operated in the embodiment of
The pump tube 16 is shown on an enlarged scale in
In the embodiment of
As shown in
The jet pump 10′ further comprises a nozzle needle 60 which comprises a through-bore and is supported in a longitudinally displaceable manner in a guide 62. The pump properties of the jet pump 10′ can be adapted to the requirements by appropriate adjustment of the nozzle needle 60; in particular, it is possible to vary the water throughput and/or the mixing ratio of water and air in the water/air mixture M. Adjustment can be carried out manually (for example during installation or maintenance of the system) or automatically (for example depending on the desired quantity of snow or weather conditions). In the present example, the nozzle needle 60 has a through-bore along its longitudinal axis, so further ambient air A can be introduced into the driving jet of the jet pump 10′ in order to increase the pump capacity. However, variations comprising a nozzle needle 60 which does not have a through-bore are also provided and still have the advantage of improved adjustability.
The nozzle head 52 shown in detail in
During operation, the water/air mixture M produced by the jet pump 10′ is fed into the lance rod 50 and from there into the nozzle head 52. The water/air mixture M issues from the water/air nozzles 12 (
In further variations, jet pumps 10′ as shown in
Referring to
Flat nozzles are used as water/air nozzles 12′ in the present embodiment, to achieve the fastest possible relaxation of the air and therefore to cool the smallest water droplets which then freeze and therefore form the freezing nuclei for the remaining water.
A further advantage of the configuration according to
A large number of further modifications, in particular with respect to the dimensioning of the individual components and/or the number or configuration of the jet pumps 10, 10′, 10″ or of the water/air nozzles 12, 12′ is immediately apparent to the person skilled in the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
01129558 | Dec 2001 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP02/14013 | 12/10/2002 | WO | 00 | 6/3/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/054460 | 7/3/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3494559 | Skinner | Feb 1970 | A |
3716190 | Lindlof | Feb 1973 | A |
3945567 | Rambach | Mar 1976 | A |
4145000 | Smith et al. | Mar 1979 | A |
4353504 | Girardin et al. | Oct 1982 | A |
4383646 | Smith | May 1983 | A |
4593854 | Albertsson | Jun 1986 | A |
4793554 | Kraus et al. | Dec 1988 | A |
4836446 | Chanel | Jun 1989 | A |
5090619 | Barthold et al. | Feb 1992 | A |
5180105 | Teague | Jan 1993 | A |
5379937 | Rothe | Jan 1995 | A |
6378778 | Lurås | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
3931398 | Mar 1991 | DE |
4131857 | Apr 1993 | DE |
4423124 | Jan 1996 | DE |
19627586 | Jul 1998 | DE |
BZ990045 | Apr 2001 | IT |
03-140775 | Jun 1991 | JP |
06-002964 | Jan 1994 | JP |
2000-500220 | Jan 2000 | JP |
2002-502951 | Jan 2002 | JP |
WO-9419655 | Sep 1994 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050006493 A1 | Jan 2005 | US |