The present invention relates to heat exchangers and refrigeration systems and in particular to evaporators.
In a typical refrigeration cycle there is an evaporator or chiller that cools the process fluid at the expense of boiling the refrigerant that is at lower saturation temperature and pressure, a compressor that compresses the vaporized refrigerant to an elevated pressure and temperature, a condenser that condenses the high pressure refrigerant to liquid phase at the expense of heating the cooling medium, and an expansion device that reduces the pressure of the condensed refrigerant back to the low side, thus entering the evaporator or chiller to repeat the above cycle again. This cycle is called the reverse Rankine cycle.
Such refrigeration systems are found in a variety of installations, such as food processing plants.
Refrigerants are typically synthetic and/or natural, such as ammonia, carbon dioxide, or hydrocarbons such as propane. Synthetic refrigerants are falling out of favor due to environmental concerns. However, even natural refrigerants have drawbacks; for example, ammonia is toxic and propane is flammable.
It is desirable to design an evaporator that would use a reduced amount of refrigerant, thus minimizing any danger from an accidental refrigerant release. In addition, a more efficient evaporator would be physically smaller, thus saving money.
A thin film evaporator comprises a shell having two ends, a top and a bottom. A plurality of tubes is located in the shell and extends between the two ends. The tubes form a path through the shell. The path comprises at least one pass through the shell. There is at least one refrigerant inlet which is located in the bottom of the shell. A refrigerant distributor is connected to the refrigerant inlet and is located between the shell bottom and the tubes. The distributor has openings facing the shell bottom. A perforated plate is between the distributor and the tubes. There is at least one refrigerant outlet located in the shell top. A suction is applied to the refrigerant outlet.
In accordance with one aspect, the distributor openings are sized so as to produce a spray of refrigerant.
In accordance with still another aspect, the evaporator further comprises a thin film of liquid refrigerant on the tubes, with vapor refrigerant between the tubes.
In accordance with one aspect, the thin film evaporator further comprises a demister located in the shell between the tubes and the refrigerant outlet.
In accordance with another aspect, the tubes comprise a main body of tubes. They further comprise a super heat body of tubes located between the demister and the refrigerant outlet.
In accordance with another aspect, a sump is located in the bottom of the shell.
There is also provided a method of heat exchange using a thin film evaporator having a shell with two ends, a top and a bottom, and a plurality of tubes in the shell and extending between the ends. A process fluid flows through the tubes. Refrigerant is flowed into the bottom of the shell. The refrigerant is distributed across a bottom region of the shell. A film of refrigerant is provided around the tubes and affects heat transfer between the process fluid and the refrigerant. The refrigerant is allowed to exit through a refrigerant outlet in the top of the shell. A suction is applied at the refrigerant outlet.
In accordance with one aspect, the step of distributing the refrigerant across a bottom region of the shell further comprises spraying the refrigerant against the shell.
In accordance with another aspect, the step of distributing the refrigerant across a bottom region of the shell further comprises passing the refrigerant spray through a perforated member before flowing the refrigerant around the tubes.
In accordance with one aspect, a resistance to flow in the shell is provided between the tubes and the refrigerant outlet.
In accordance with another aspect, the method further comprises the step of coalescing liquid at the top of the shell before exiting through the refrigerant outlet.
In accordance with another aspect, the tubes comprise a main body of tubes. A super heat body of tubes is provided between the resistance and the refrigerant outlet.
In accordance with another aspect, the refrigerant comprises oil. The step of flowing refrigerant into the shell further comprises spraying the refrigerant against the shell before flowing the refrigerant to the tubes. The oil is drained into a sump in the shell.
Referring to the Figs., the evaporator 11 has a cylindrical shell 13. Tubes 15, which carry the process fluid, are located in the shell. The evaporator shown in the drawings has two passes of tubes 15, with a lower pass 15L of tubes and an upper pass 15U of tubes. The tubes are not touching one another and are spaced apart to allow the refrigerant to flow around each tube. Baffle plates 17 support the tubes inside of the shell. The ends of the tubes are coupled to tube sheets 19, located at the ends of the shell. Thus, the tubes 15 extend between the tube sheets 19 inside of the shell 13. (The tubes 15 are not shown in
At one end of the shell, an end bonnet 20 (see
At the opposite end of the shell is another end bonnet 31 with a single chamber so that fluid exiting the upper pass 15U of tubes enters the lower pass 15L of tubes.
The chiller can have a single pass of tubes or more than two passes of tubes.
The process fluid 30, such as water, brine, gas, etc., flows through the inlet 25 (see
The refrigerant enters the shell at the bottom and moves up, where it exits at the top of the shell. The refrigerant flows into the shell by way of distribution pipes 37. The distribution pipes 37 are arranged in assemblies 33. In the preferred embodiment, there are two distribution pipe assemblies 33, arranged end-to-end along the bottom portion of the shell. Each distribution pipe assembly 33 is shaped like an elongated “H” (see
The distribution pipe assemblies 33 can be in various configurations. If the shell is short enough, only a single distribution pipe assembly 33 need be used. Conversely, a longer shell may require more than two distribution pipe assemblies. Likewise, each distribution pipe assembly can have one or more pipes 37. For example, a single pipe can be used, which pipe can be of a larger inside diameter than the pipes 37 shown in
A demister pad 47 is located above the upper pass 15U of tubes. The demister pad is, in one embodiment, a 1″ thick pad of stainless steel wool wire. One or more refrigerant outlets 49 are at the top of the shell, located above the demister pad 47. Between the demister pad 47 and the outlets 49 a single or multiple rows of tubes 15D are located. These tubes 15D are part of the upper pass 15U. The tubes in this section could be the same diameter or type as the tubes in the other sections or passes, or the tubes could be different. For example, the tubes 15D could be of a smaller diameter so as to provide more tubes above the demister 47. The tubes 15D impart super heat to the refrigerant. These tubes 15D act as the final barrier to stop any liquid refrigerant carry-over into the compressor 63 (
The shell 13 is provided with a sump 51 in its bottom. The bottom wall of the shell at the sump periphery is curved into the sump so as to facilitate drainage into the sump.
The evaporator is installed in a refrigerant system 61 as shown in
The expansion device 67 is provided at the refrigerant inlets to control the flow of refrigerant into the evaporator. Sensors 69 are located at the refrigerant outlets 49. The sensors can be pressure transducers or temperature sensors. As the demand for refrigerant increases, as sensed at the outlets 49, the expansion device 67 can allow more refrigerant into the evaporator, and vice versa.
In operation, the process fluid 30 (
At the upper end of the shell, the refrigerant in the spaces between the tubes 15 is mostly vapor and may contain some liquid. The demister pad 47 coalesces any liquid refrigerant and thereby prevents liquid from entering the compressor 63. The coalesced liquid drops back down onto the tubes 15 below the demister 47. The demister pad also applies a back pressure across the refrigerant outlets 49, which serve to evenly distribute the refrigerant across the tube bundle.
As the refrigerant vapor exits the evaporator 11 (
The sump 51 (
The thin film evaporator has advantages over other types of heat exchangers. Where a flooded evaporator requires the shell to be flooded with refrigerant, the thin film evaporator requires a much smaller charge of refrigerant. For example, for a 130 Ton-Refrigeration capacity system, a flooded evaporator would require approximately 1200 pounds of ammonia, while the thin film evaporator would require only about 35 pounds. Thus, there is less toxic refrigerant to potentially leak into the atmosphere.
On the other hand, conventional spray evaporators require a pump to spray the refrigerant down onto the tubes. Refrigerant pumps are expensive as they must have special seals and maintenance costs are high due to moving parts in a system. Furthermore, in order to ensure reliability of the refrigeration system, typically a backup pump is called for. The use of two special pumps significantly increases the cost of the refrigeration system. Furthermore, the refrigerant charge is still higher in the spray evaporator as compared to thin film evaporator. However, with the thin film evaporator described herein, no pump is needed as the compressor suction is used to draw the refrigerant up through the evaporator.
The foregoing disclosure and showings made in the drawings are merely illustrative of the principles of this invention and are not to be interpreted in a limiting sense.
This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/414,059 filed Nov. 16, 2010.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61414059 | Nov 2010 | US |