This invention relates to motor vehicles that are powered by heat engines and more particularly to a system for removing heat from any location in a vehicle that is prone to undesirably high temperatures, especially heat generated by a heat engine in an engine compartment.
The nature of the thermodynamic cycle on which a heat engine operates requires that heat of combustion be rejected to a waste heat medium. In an air-cooled engine, the medium is air that surrounds the engine. In a liquid-cooled engine, the medium is liquid that circulates through coolant passages in the engine where it is heated before passing to a radiator where the heat is transferred to air that flows through the radiator, although some amount of heat is also rejected directly to air surrounding the engine by radiation and convection.
A motor vehicle typically houses the engine in some sort of a compartment. Most cars and trucks have a front engine compartment that is bounded frontally by a front end structure that includes the radiator and rearwardly by the occupant compartment, or cab. The sides of the engine compartment are bounded by fender structures, and the top by a hood that can be opened to provide access to the engine compartment.
Underhood temperature is a matter of concern to vehicle designers because excessively high temperatures can have adverse effects on the performance and durability of various devices and systems. Space within an engine compartment is often at a premium, and the more crowded an engine compartment becomes, more components are exposed to engine compartment heat, and the movement of air through the engine compartment that can aid to some extent in limiting underhood temperatures becomes more difficult.
Engine operating temperature is affected by various factors. Higher operating temperatures may be necessary in order to enable compliance with relevant emission control regulations. That can add to engine compartment heating.
The cooling system of a liquid cooled engine is typically sized to allow the engine to operate at a desired engine operating temperature, but even when a cooling system is sized to accommodate higher engine operating temperatures, more engine heat is transferred by convention, conduction, and/or radiation to devices in the engine compartment, to the structure bounding the engine compartment, and to air in the engine compartment, and that heat isn't removed by the liquid cooling system. Moreover, placement of a radiator in certain vehicles causes at least some of the engine heat that is rejected at the radiator to pass through the engine compartment.
The present invention relates to a system for removing significant engine heat from an engine compartment in a motor vehicle, especially heat generated by operation of a heat engine in an engine compartment. By using the thermosyphon principle, the inventive system enables heat to be removed by natural circulation of thermofluid thereby rendering the system passive in the sense that it does not draw power from either the engine or the electrical system. The amount of heat that can be removed can be large enough to provide a significant limitation on excessive underhood temperatures.
The invention can be adapted for various types of vehicles, including those having front engine compartments as described above, and also “cab-over” vehicles. Moreover, components of the inventive system can be constructed to fit in ways that are not overly intrusive. For example, an evaporator can be constructed with a small vertical dimension (thickness) and a more expansive length and width for overlying the expanse of an engine both fore-and-aft and side-to-side.
According to one generic aspect, the invention relates to a motor vehicle comprising a chassis supporting a heat engine that propels the vehicle, and a thermosyphon system that comprises a collector that collects heat generated by running the engine and transfers collected heat to a thermofluid that due to heating is forced to circulate to a dissipator where heat is rejected and then back to the collector to collect more heat.
According to another generic aspect, the invention relates to a method of removing heat from a space in a motor vehicle where heat generated by operation of a heat engine that propels the vehicle tends to collect. Engine heat is collected via a collector that transfers collected heat to a thermofluid to force the thermofluid to circulate to a dissipator where heat is rejected and from the dissipator back to the collector.
The foregoing, along with further features and advantages of the invention, will be seen in the following disclosure of a presently preferred embodiment of the invention depicting the best mode contemplated at this time for carrying out the invention. This specification includes drawings, now briefly described as follows.
System 10 comprises a reservoir 14 and a heat collector 16. The latter is disposed to collect heat from engine 12 via conduction and/or convention, and/or radiation. Removal of heat by conduction occurs when collector 16 is placed in physical contact with engine 12. Removal of heat by convection occurs when air that has been heated passes across a surface of collector 16. Removal of heat by radiation occurs when collector 16 is radiantly heated by engine 12. Collector 16 transfers collected heat to thermofluid 18 in reservoir 14.
By making collector 16 a “black body” as that term is understood in physics, it becomes an ideal absorber of radiant heat. Hence, a surface of collector 16 is exposed to the radiant heat source, and it is through that surface that collector 16 is heated. Heat is removed from collector 16 by transfer to thermofluid 18 in reservoir 14. Because
System 10 comprises a closed circuit through which thermofluid 18 naturally circulates when the system is removing heat from engine 12. A conduit 20 conveys thermofluid from reservoir 14 to a dissipater, or condenser, 22. A conduit 24 conveys thermofluid from dissipater 22 to reservoir 14.
Reservoir 14 forms an evaporator where thermofluid in liquid phase is evaporated to gas phase by engine heat collected by collector 16 and transferred to the thermofluid. The rate of evaporation depends on factors such as the temperature to which liquid is heated, with heating of liquid to its boiling point typically creating the greatest rate of evaporation.
Because the vapor tends to rise, it migrates through conduit 20 to the higher elevation of dissipater 22. The latter is constructed and arranged to transfer thermofluid heat to any suitable medium, such as air 26, at a location remote from the engine compartment within which engine 12 is located. Consequently, as the thermofluid vapor gives up heat to air 26, it begins to condense within dissipater 22. Liquid fluid collects at the bottom of dissipater 22 where the entrance to conduit 24 is located. The condensate then falls by gravity through conduit 24 to return to reservoir 14 where it can be re-heated.
Thus, a continuous natural circulation of thermofluid through system 10 can continually remove heat from the engine compartment.
It is believed that certain components that convey fluids involved in combustion processes occurring in a heat engine can benefit by association with a thermosyphon system. For example, an EGR (exhaust gas recirculation) valve conveys hot exhaust gases from the exhaust system to the intake system and often requires an associated an EGR cooler to cool the exhaust gases before they enter the valve. Associating the thermosyphon system with an EGR valve could eliminate the need for a separate EGR cooler. Similarly charge air from the compressor of a turbocharger typically passes through a charge air cooler, and use of the thermosyphon system to cool charge air could perform that function.
Because a motor vehicle may operate in geographical areas that experience a substantial range of temperatures, a thermofluid should be selected for suitability over the relevant temperature range.
While a presently preferred embodiment of the invention has been illustrated and described, it should be appreciated that principles of the invention apply to all embodiments falling within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1795044 | Rundlett | Mar 1931 | A |
1795045 | Rundlett | Mar 1931 | A |
2496189 | Williams | Jan 1950 | A |
3876245 | Lowery | Apr 1975 | A |
3927651 | Harrow et al. | Dec 1975 | A |
3935849 | Mills | Feb 1976 | A |
3939813 | Harrow et al. | Feb 1976 | A |
3986665 | Kofink et al. | Oct 1976 | A |
4011849 | Latham | Mar 1977 | A |
4087047 | Wulf et al. | May 1978 | A |
4126111 | Hafner et al. | Nov 1978 | A |
4140173 | Wulf et al. | Feb 1979 | A |
4146176 | Beauvais et al. | Mar 1979 | A |
4415118 | Endo | Nov 1983 | A |
4421159 | Lin | Dec 1983 | A |
4561387 | Korkemeier et al. | Dec 1985 | A |
5272891 | Erickson | Dec 1993 | A |
5327734 | Haynes et al. | Jul 1994 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070079622 A1 | Apr 2007 | US |