1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to closed circuit coolers and evaporative refrigerant condensers.
2. Description of the Background
Both evaporative closed circuit coolers and evaporative refrigerant condensers utilize heat exchangers to transfer heat from an internal fluid or refrigerant indirectly to an external circulating fluid that is usually water. The circulating water, in turn, transfers heat and mass directly to the air. The air flow is induced or forced through the heat exchanger via a motive device such as a fan. The heat exchanger, in the established technology, consists of multiple serpentine tubes that are connected to the main fluid or refrigerant flow via header assemblies. The thermal capacity of these coolers and condensers is a function of the mass air flow rate as well as the internal and external heat transfer coefficients of the heat exchanger coil.
One previous technology advancement, over the original round bare tubes, improves the mass air flow rate by changing the round tube shape to elliptical, with the long axis of the ellipse parallel to the air flow direction (U.S. Pat. No. 4,755,331). Since the ellipse is more aerodynamically shaped than the round tube, the air flow resistance is reduced, air flow is subsequently increased, and, thereby, thermal capacity is increased.
Another previous technology improvement has changed the angles of the long axis of the ellipse in an alternating pattern, left and right. The thermal heat rejection capability of each tube increases with the canted pattern which also results in a larger spacing between tubes. This effectively reduces cost by reducing the number of tubes required to achieve the same heat rejection capability of the vertically positioned tube.
Another previous and significant technological advancement places spiral fins on the elliptical tubes of the heat exchanger at a specific spacing and fin height. This advancement increases the overall thermal capacity of the heat exchanger by a very significant amount. The fins are spaced along the length of the tubes so as to increase the thermal heat transfer coefficients without increasing the resistance to air flow. Since this technological advance also extends the total amount of heat transfer surface, it allows water conservation and visible plume reduction through partial or complete dry operation at reduced environmental air temperatures.
All of the coolers and condensers that use the spiral fins on elliptical tubes either pull or push the air into the plenum beneath the coil either from the side (perpendicular to the tube axis and parallel to the longitudinal axis of the fins) or from all sides. Although it seems counterintuitive, it has now been discovered that by orienting the air flow entering the heat plenum to be parallel to the tubes (perpendicular to the fin axis), an additional gain in thermal capacity is realized. Initial test results show that orienting the air flow so that it enters the plenum from a direction that is parallel to the tube axis and perpendicular to the fin axis produces a total gain in capacity of 25% compared to when the air inlet air flow is perpendicular to the tube axis and parallel to the fin axis. This additional capacity gain due to the orientation of the coils relative to the inlet air direction was highly unexpected.
Arranging the fan, coils, and air inlet faces to cause the air flow to enter the plenum from a direction parallel to the tube axis/perpendicular to the fin axis can be done is several ways, depending on the fan type and unit type.
For example, the axial fan induced draft counterflow cooler or condenser, for a single cell unit, draws air into the plenum from all four sides. To produce the desired improvement result for this unit, the coils remain in the same orientation, with the heat exchanger tubes running parallel to the two long sides of the unit and perpendicular to two short sides of the unit. To get the inlet air flow mostly parallel to the tube axis, air inlets are provided only on the two air inlet faces that are the short side of the unit, the sides with the tube ends. In a unit that has already been constructed, the air inlets on the long sides (the sides that parallel the length of the heat exchanger tubes) are sealed off, leaving the air inlets open on the remaining two short sides. This arrangement causes all of the air entering the plenum of the unit to enter from a direction that is parallel to the heat exchanger tube axes and perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the fins. In order to accommodate increased air flow through the sides that face the tube ends without increasing the pressure loss significantly, the height of the air inlet openings may be increased, increasing the air inlet cross sectional area and reducing the air inlet velocity to a desired level. A further advantage of this arrangement is that units may be positioned as multiple cells with the closed sides side-by-side without penalty. It is noted that the “long” and “short” side designations in the foregoing description are intended to designate the side of the unit that is parallel to the tube length (“long”) and the side of the unit that faces the tube ends (“short”), respectively. In the case of a unit that is substantially square in plan, the invention is achieved by providing air inlets to the plenum on only the two sides of the unit that face the tube ends.
There are several additional possibilities for a forced draft unit with either axial or centrifugal fans all on one side. In a first embodiment, the coils are rotated 90 degrees so the heat exchanger tube axis is parallel to the direction of air flow entering the plenum. For another embodiment, the fans are placed on either one or both of the short ends. In a third embodiment, a two cell, back-to-back arrangement has coils that are rotated 90 degrees relative to a standard orientation, but these coils run fully across the width of both cells so that longer coils could be utilized.
According to an alternative embodiment, prior art induced draft devices (specifically, evaporative coolers with elliptical tube with spiral fins, see
Referring to
According to another embodiment of the invention, shown in
Referring to
Number | Date | Country | |
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62276328 | Jan 2016 | US |