The invention relates to a storage container for cryogenic media, especially for liquid hydrogen, having an outside container, an inside container and at least one extraction and fill line.
Below, in the labelling of special cryogenic media according to their aggregate state, the letter “G” for gaseous and “L” for liquid are prefixed, thus, e.g., GH2 and LH2 for gaseous and liquid hydrogen.
In particular, hydrogen is gaining importance at present as a fuel due to increasing energy demand and increased environmental consciousness. Thus, trucks, busses and passenger cars are already being powered by means of hydrogen-fueled engines or fuel cells. Moreover, initial experiments are underway to power aircraft with the above-mentioned media.
The storage of hydrogen “on board” the above-mentioned modes of transportation in liquid form is most efficient in this case. The hydrogen must be cooled for this purpose to roughly 21 K and kept at this temperature—which can only be done by the corresponding insulating measures on the storage containers or tanks—but storage in the gaseous state due to the low density of GH2 in the above-mentioned modes of transportation is generally less favorable, since storage here must be done in large-volume and heavy storage containers at high pressures.
Generic storage containers for cryogenic media, especially for liquid hydrogen, have been known for a long time. If no medium is removed from them over a longer time interval, within the inside container the temperature and pressure rise due to the incidence of heat from the environment into the medium, which cannot be prevented. Such storage containers therefore always have the capability that when a certain pressure is reached, some of the medium stored in them can be released from the inside container into the atmosphere. The amount that has escaped from the inside container in this way is, however, lost unused.
Known storage containers for liquid hydrogen enable parking times from 2 to 3 days before evaporation of gaseous hydrogen occurs. The acceptance of hydrogen as a fuel—especially in passenger cars—is dependent, i.a., on the possible length of time the passenger car is parked. Blowing-off of hydrogen after 2 to 3 days would certainly not be accepted by the customer.
The object of this invention is to devise a storage container for cryogenic media, especially for hydrogen, which enables a longer parking time, therefore reduces heat incidence onto the medium stored in it, which results in that the temperature and pressure rise within the inside container proceeds more slowly.
To achieve this object, a storage container is proposed that is characterized in that in the storage container, there is at least one additional storage space for a medium and at least the extraction line(s) of the storage container is(are) dynamically connected to the additional storage space.
Here, the dynamic connection between the extraction line or lines of the storage container and the additional storage space is made preferably in the form of a heat exchanger.
The additional storage space provided according to the invention within the storage container can be filled, for example, with a medium that stores energy via a phase transition, such as, for example, nitrogen, argon, etc. Such media are also called PCMs (Phase Change Material).
According to advantageous embodiments of the storage container according to the invention, a shield that preferably at least partially surrounds the inside container is assigned to the additional storage space, and the additional storage space is in thermal contact with this shield.
In addition or alternatively, the additional storage space can also be made in the form of a hollow chamber section and can surround the inside container of the storage container according to the invention at least in part.
The heat incidence into the storage container according to the invention that necessarily occurs now leads to the medium stored in the additional storage space or the shield connected to the additional storage space—that shield consists preferably of copper—being heated. This results in that the temperature and thus also the pressure in the inside container remain first essentially unchanged or rise to a much smaller degree than is the case in known storage containers. Thus, evaporation of the medium from the inside container of the storage container is slowed down, significantly lengthening the parking times.
Developing the storage container for cryogenic media according to the invention, it is proposed that at least one fill line be assigned to the additional storage space.
This configuration makes it possible to implement a so-called “open system” in which, for example, ambient air travels into the additional storage space via the fill line.
If at this point the inside container of the storage container according to the invention is filled with a cryogenic medium, the air in the additional storage space liquifies. In the case of a longer parking time, the air located in the additional storage space is then heated again as a result of heat incidence.
The air can be liquefied, however, not only when the storage container is being filled with the cryogenic medium, but also—as will be explained below—when the cryogenic medium is being removed from the storage tank. Liquefaction during removal additionally has the advantage that the heat energy of the removed cold medium is used.
Means for cleaning the medium routed into the additional storage space are assigned to the above-mentioned fill line.
Here, these cleaning means are in turn preferably made as at least one heat exchanger in which heat exchange takes place between the medium that has been supplied to the additional storage space and the cryogenic medium that has been withdrawn from the storage container.
If at this point, for example, air from the vicinity travels via the fill line into the additional storage space only when the above-mentioned heat exchange takes place with the cryogenic medium withdrawn from the storage container, this heat exchange acts as a cold trap for the moisture contained in the ambient air and the carbon dioxide contained in it. These components condense as early as during heat exchange and can thus be separated from the amount of air that is to be supplied to the additional storage space. Freezing-out of these components within the line system is thus efficiently prevented.
The storage container according to the invention and other configurations thereof are explained in more detail using the two embodiments shown in FIGS. 1 and 2.
The two extraction lines 6 and 6′ are combined by means of a three-way valve a into a common line 7. The removed hydrogen is now routed through the two heat exchangers WT 3 and WT 2 and preheated in them. While the preheating of the hydrogen in the heat exchanger WT 3 will be detailed later, in the heat exchanger WT 2 further preheating of the hydrogen against a cooling medium, such as for example engine coolant, takes place.
The hydrogen is then supplied to a drive assembly and/or a fuel cell via the line 8, in which there is the control valve b.
According to the invention, within the storage container 1 there is now an additional storage space 5. In principle, however, there can also be two or more additional storage spaces. The additional storage space 5 surrounds the inside container 4 of the storage container 1 according to the invention essentially completely in the embodiment shown in FIG. 1. This can be accomplished, for example, in that the additional storage space 5 is made in the form of a hollow chamber section.
Ambient air is supplied to the above-mentioned WT 3 via the line 9 in which there is a valve c. The latter is cooled in the heat exchanger WT 3 against the hydrogen flow to be preheated in the line 7, whereby the unwanted components such as moisture and carbon dioxide are condensed out and can be withdrawn via the line 12, in which there is likewise a valve d. The dehumidified air flow from which carbon dioxide has been removed is then supplied via the line 10 in which there is a valve e to the additional storage space 5 that is located within the storage container 1.
For safety reasons, the additional storage space 5 has a drain line 11 in which an overpressure valve f is located that enables discharge via the drain line 11 when a preset pressure is reached.
The additional storage space 5 in the embodiment shown in
The liquified air located in the additional storage space 5 is now forcefully cooled via the heat exchanger WT 1 in the storage container 1 according to the invention each time hydrogen is removed—whether via the extraction line 6 or 6′.
By reducing the vapor pressure of the liquid air in the storage space 5, new air that has been precooled in the heat exchanger WT 3 is taken in and liquefied in the heat exchanger WT 1 or in the storage space 5 itself. In order to prevent water and carbon dioxide from entering the storage space 5 and in order to achieve precooling of the air, the air that is taken in is cooled in the heat exchanger WT 3 to a temperature which is above the liquefaction point of air. Water and carbon dioxide precipitate as ice on the cold surfaces of the heat exchanger WT 3. The regeneration of the heat exchanger WT 3 takes place during any longer parking time of the vehicle.
Valves e and c are closed when no hydrogen is being removed from the inside container 4. The heat exchanger WT 3 is heated at these times due to heat incidence from the environment or by a built-in heater that is not shown in
While in the embodiment shown in
By the appropriate selection of material or materials for the shield 12, this embodiment of the invention achieves equivalent shielding of the inside container 4 compared to the design according to the embodiment shown in FIG. 1.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 52 856 | Oct 2000 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP01/12057 | 10/18/2001 | WO | 00 | 9/25/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/35143 | 5/2/2002 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040107706 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |