The present invention is directed to a device for effecting heat transfer from a first fluid medium to a second fluid medium and for enhancing mixing and uniform distribution of the second fluid within the confines of a conduit.
It is notoriously well known in the processing of fluid streams to employ static mixers and heat exchangers as enhancements in promoting product uniformity and adjusting product temperature. Mixers can contain active elements such as paddles and rotors although it is quite common to provide static elements whereby the turbulent flow of the fluids in and around these elements enhance fluid mixing without the need for moving parts which inherently add to the cost of the mixing operation both in terms of power requirements and labor intensive maintenance procedures. Many static mixers rely on a mixing element configuration that presents a set of interstices to the product flow. Elements of this type divide a fluid stream along the mixing path and recombine locally created sub streams into a more homogeneous mixture.
It is further common to contain within a conduit a series of tubes or pipes to effect heat transfer between a product stream and a fluid medium contained within tubes in contact with the flow of fluid product.
It has long been known that reduction of the internal film coefficient of the moving fluid product as it contacts the tubes or pipes of a conventional tube and shell heat exchanger is advantageous for reduction of the internal film coefficient enhances heat transfer. In this regard, reference is made to
It is thus an object of the present invention to provide a device in which a moving fluid product is both mixed and subject to heat transfer as a result of its contact with a fluid medium employed for that purpose.
It is a further object of the present invention to accomplish the above-referenced objects while, at the same time, improving the efficiency of such a device dramatically as compared to devices offered for this purpose commercially. These and further objects of the present invention will become more readily apparent when considering the following disclosure and claims.
The present invention is directed to a device for effecting heat transfer from a first fluid medium to a second fluid medium passing within the confines of a conduit. The device comprises an inlet for receiving and an outlet for discharging the second fluid medium. The conduit further has a substantially circular cross section and longitudinal axis. The device further comprises a core pipe having a diameter and substantially circular cross section, the core pipe being located along the longitudinal axis of the conduit. The device further includes a series of tubular members, the first tubular member being helically wound upon the core pipe and radially extending from the core pipe and includes at least one additional tubular member also helically wound upon a previously applied helically wound tubular member wherein all windings of each tubular member are uniformly and equally spaced along the helically wound tubular member, the windings being applied at approximately equal 45° angles to the longitudinal axis so that each turn of a tubular member forms an interstice with a turn of an adjacent tubular member of approximately 90°. The various tubular members and core pipe are in fluid communication having an inlet to receive the first fluid medium and an outlet to discharge the first fluid medium. The device is further characterized wherein each tubular member is sized with respect to the core pipe such that the ratio of the diameter of the core pipe to the diameters of the tubular members are substantially whole numbers, and the spacing between starts of all tubular members are substantially equal.
As noted previously, the present invention is directed to a device for effecting heat transfer from a first fluid medium to a second fluid medium and for enhancing mixing and uniform distribution of the second fluid medium within the confines of a conduit. This can perhaps best be visualized by referring to FIG. 4. Device 40 is shown as consisting of conduit 41 having a cross section and longitudinal axis 42. The conduit is provided with an inlet 43 for introduction of the first fluid within conduit 41 and an outlet 44 for passing the first fluid from the conduit. The conduit further is provided with inlet 45 for the introduction of the fluid product as well as downstream exit 46 for passing the product fluid from conduit 41.
Referring further to
In operating the device of
The tube windings to be contained within area 48 of
The addition of multiple and consecutive helically wound layers of tubing upon core pipe 47 is shown in consecutive
As noted previously, a characterizing feature of the present invention is providing a series of tubular members wound about core pipe 47 comprising a first tubular member wound directly upon the core pipe, and radially extending from core pipe 47 is at least one additional tubular member containing segments 35, 36, 37, 38, etc., built upon previously applied core pipe starts 32, 33, 34, etc. It is further a design feature of the present invention that all of the windings of each of the tubular members be uniformly and equally spaced along each helically wound tubular member. In this regard, reference is made to
Reference is next made to
Reference is first made to
If DWT=the diameter of various helical tubular members, chosen as, for example, ¼″ and DCT=the core pipe diameter chosen, for example, as ½″, knowing that DCT/DWT=R allows one to make certain design and engineering decisions.
Practical winding techniques have shown that a value of R=1½ is manageable, but with great difficulty, while making R=2 is fairly easy, so it is established that DCT=2 DWT. This makes it mechanically convenient for the first winding layer to have four starts.
For a static mixer to be effective, uniform spatial distribution of the interstices where stream division occurs is a definite design goal. To do this, the distance between adjacent windings of a given layer are to be the same and have a 45° winding angle relative to the longitudinal axis of the assembly. This will make the interstice angles between one layer of tubular members and the next equal to the optimum value of 90°.
If DBC is the “bolt circle” diameter of a given tube winding as seen from an end view where helically wound tubular members have been straightened from an angled winding to one whose ends are parallel to the assembly axis, as shown in
Turning to
At layer 3 (FIG. 5C), a bolt circle diameter of 1.75 is calculated. Nine starts provide an adjacent turn separation of 0.611 while ten starts (
On layer 4, twelve starts (
In fabricating the device of the present invention, it is contemplated that core pipe 47 be assembled in fluid communication with various layers of tubular members as shown. Once the sub-assembly has been completed, it is copper brazed in order to improve its fluid dynamics and its heat transfer characteristics when nested within the conduit.
As a further design goal, it is contemplated that the device of the present invention be provided with a plurality of inlets for the second fluid proximate the inlets of the conduit that are uniformly spaced about the periphery of the conduit. In this regard, reference is made to
In appreciation of the example, which follows, the following recited terms have indicated meanings:
This design can be compared with a conventional shell and tube exchanger having 42 tubes1 each having an inside diameter of 0.87″.
1This design value is taken from pages 11-15 of the 5th Edition of The Chemical Engineers Handbook.
Area=π×0.87×42×96/144=76.5 ft2
The new design then has a surface area advantage by a factor of 1.49 or 45%.
The design detailed here produces windings that cross each other at an angle of 90° and at 45° to the axis.
In addition to the significant advantage in surface area provided by this design, the static mixer system created by the helical windings will also improve heat transfer giving an overall advantage over the conventional shell and tube exchanger of three to ten times.
In addition to the heat exchange area increase provided by the helical windings, there is yet another advantage. The static mixer effect is achieved at the tube external surfaces, which is known to enhance heat transfer by a significant factor of three or more. This is achieved without the manufacturing complication and cost of installing mixing elements in tubes.
While the principles of this invention have been discussed above in connection with several alternative embodiments, it should be understood that those of ordinary skill in this art might find numerous other applications of the principles. Accordingly, the invention is not limited to the specific exemplary applications described above but may be employed in any situation in which a fluid is intended to be mixed and undergo simultaneous heat transfer.
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2888251 | Dalin | May 1959 | A |
3130779 | Huet | Apr 1964 | A |
3130780 | Winship | Apr 1964 | A |
3335790 | Aranyi et al. | Aug 1967 | A |
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4462463 | Gorham, Jr. | Jul 1984 | A |
4790371 | Zundel | Dec 1988 | A |
6095240 | Hassanein et al. | Aug 2000 | A |