The invention relates to a tube heat exchanger comprising at least a tube extending along a certain axial direction, each tube being provided with heat exchange fins spaced apart from one another along the axial direction and extending radially from the tube, each fin being relief structured to form a groove/rib arranged at a first distance from the tube.
More specifically, the invention applies to a tube heat exchanger employing air as secondary exchange fluid such as air cooled heat exchangers used for the cooling or condensing of fluids in the oil and gas, power, petrochemical industries.
Generally speaking, such equipment comprises a main heat exchanger provided with a bundle of finned tubes in which the fluid to be cooled or condensed circulates. These heat exchangers are generally equipped with 50 to 300 finned tubes and have as geometrical characteristics a length of 8 to 18 m and width of 0.3 to 5 m. These heat exchangers are supported by a steel structure. The cooling or condensing of the internal fluid is ensured by a forced circulation of ambient air crossing the external fins. The air circulation is generally ensured by fans that are located either below (forced draft) or above (induced draft) the finned tube of the heat exchanger. In order to optimize the cooling, the internal fluid circulation can be divided into passes, the heat exchanger comprising generally between three to eight rows of tubes.
The finned tubes consist of bare tubes or inner grooved tubes, having a diameter between 15 and 55 mm, generally composed of steel or steel alloy with aluminum fins on the outside of the tube. The selection of the bare tube material is a function of the internal fluid in respect to corrosion and safety issues.
The aluminum fins around for example the bare tubeshave the advantage of increasing the external heat exchange surface by a factor between 15 and 25 compared to the bare tube external surface. This surface increase allows the increase of the heat transfer but generates pressure losses that are overcame by performing fan system. Aluminum fins can be realized through different manufacturing processes. In most of the known configurations, the fin profile along the tube is helicoidal. Moreover, the fins are independent from one tube to the other, each tube being therefore equipped with its own fin that is spirally wound around it.
In general, the air is blown on the outside of the finned tubes at a face velocity between 1 and 4 m/s. At such velocities and for the geometric configurations considered (particularly air passage sections, space between two fins or two consecutive tubes), the air flow regime is overall laminar with some local turbulences, and characterized by relatively low heat exchange coefficients with the external fins.
The areas of high heat exchange coefficients are the leading edge of the fins and the tube to fins junctions in the upstream zone. Thus, due to the structure of the flow and the heat exchanger, the downstream areas of the tubes located behind the tubes in the flow direction show very poor heat transfer capacities. Said downstream areas, known as recirculation zones of the heat exchanger, are characterized by a recirculation of the air, which generates pressure drops and which does not enable a good cooling of the fins.
Some tube heat exchangers are provided with serrated fin with partial cutting performed along the fin periphery and enabling to locally increase the heat transfer through local turbulences created in the air flow. The Patent documents EP 0 854 344 and US 2010/0 282 456 disclose such serrated fins in which the cut parts are bent to allow higher heat transfer rate and guidance of the air flow. However this fin design shows a very poor resistance to fouling phenomena.
The Patent document KR 2010/0 102 937, discloses a tube heat exchanger with fin provided with holes formed on the downstream side of the fins to minimize the flow separation and increase the heat transfer coefficient. Nevertheless, this fin design does not solve the issues related to the low heat transfer that occurs in the downstream area of the finned tubes due to recirculation. In addition, the effective exchange surface area for transferring heat is decreased because of the holes.
Patent document U.S. Pat. No. 7,743,821 discloses a tube heat exchanger with fin having on its surface a relief with dimples or grooves formed by mechanical deformation of the fins. Such dimples or grooves make it possible to increase the heat exchange between the air and the fin thanks to the creation of turbulences while increasing the pressure drop.
Patent document FR 2 940 422 discloses a tube heat exchanger with fin provided with grooves having different dimensions that progressively decrease on moving radially away from the tube so as to form a guide for a fluid around the tube. Patent document US 2010/0 155 041 also describes tube heat exchanger comprising finned tubes with a grooved fin structure.
Patent document US 2008/0 023 180 discloses a tube heat exchanger including a tube with fins having on its surface a relief with dimples or grooves, or a combination of dimples and grooves for heat transfer enhancement with minimum pressure loss, compared to smooth fins.
Even though the fin patterns of the previous patent documents improve the heat transfer, improved performances are still targeted.
An object of the invention is to provide a tube heat exchanger with optimized thermo-hydraulic characteristics enabling to reach an increase in heat exchanges between the air and the fluid circulating in the tube, without deteriorating the pressure drop and with good resistance to fouling phenomena.
To this end, the invention provides a tube heat exchanger comprising at least one tube extending along a certain axial direction, each tube being provided with heat exchange fins spaced apart from one another along the axial direction and extending radially from the tube, each fin being relief structured to form dimples and a groove/rib arranged at a first distance from the tube, characterized in that dimples are placed on the outside of the groove/rib and arranged in at least one line surrounding the groove/rib structure at a second distance from the tube greater than the first distance and in that the groove/rib has a depth along the axial direction greater than the depth of the dimples.
The main advantage of such a design is that the dimples placed on the outside of the groove/rib create local turbulences in the air flow, that, by guidance of the air flow and in particular in the downstream area of the finned tube to prevent air recirculation, contribute to the heat transfer increase coefficient with reasonable pressure losses increase.
The tube heat exchanger of the invention may have the following features:
the groove/rib has a depth between 0.6 and 1.6 mm and preferably between 0.8 and 1.4 mm, and the dimples has a depth between 0.4 and 1.4 mm and preferably between 0.6 and 1.2 mm;
the fins have a disc shape and are each provided with an annular groove/rib and an annular line of dimples;
the fins have a helicïdal shape and are provided with a helicoidal groove/rib and a helicoidal line of dimples;
the dimples have a shape chosen in the group comprising at least hemispherical, pyramidal, truncated shapes;
in a certain axial plane, the width of the groove/rib is between 1.2 and 3.2 mm, the width of the dimples is between 1.2 and 2.4 mm and the pitch between the middles of two adjacent dimples is between 4 and 10 mm and preferably between 5 and 8 mm;
in a certain axial plane, the distance between the tube and the groove/rib is between 3 and 7 mm and preferably between 4 mm and 6 mm, and the distance between the tube and the dimples is between 8.5 and 12.5 mm and preferably between 9.5 mm and 11.5 mm;
the groove/rib and the dimples are arranged on both sides of said fin.
The present invention will be better understood and other advantages will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description by way of non-limiting examples and illustrated by the accompanying drawings in which:
In
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The groove and the rib of the groove/rib 5 are corresponding to each other, the groove being visible on one side of the fin 4, the rib being visible on the other side of the fin 4. As shown on
As shown on
When the fins 4 have disk shape, the groove/rib 5 and the line of dimples 6 are annular. When the fins are helicoidally wound, the groove/rib 5 and the line of dimples 6 are helicoïdal. The distance D1 between the tube 2 and the groove/rib 5 and the distance D2 between the dimples 6 and the tube are preferably constant. For simplicity of manufacture, each tube 2 has fins 4 of the same configuration over its whole length. But tubes 2 may also be provided with different configurations of fins 4.
This fin 4 design allows a subsequent increase of the global heat transfer and is associated with reasonable increase of the air side pressure loss. Indeed, the groove/rib 5 close to the tube 2, allows for guidance of the air flow and in particular in the downstream area of the finned tube 2 which is known to be inefficient. The depth P1 of the groove/rib 5 is optimized to get the maximum effect of the air flow guidance. Such guidance effect is visible on
The dimples 6 placed on the outside of the groove/rib 5 create local turbulences in the air flow, which contribute to the heat transfer increase coefficient with reasonable pressure losses increase. If there are only grooves 5, the heat exchange is mainly improve in the downstream area of the tubes 2. If there are only dimples 6, the heat exchange is improved all around the fins 4 except in the downstream of the tubes 2. That is why the combination of the groove 5 and the dimples 6 is efficient because the heat exchange is improved all around the tubes 2 thanks to the guidance of the air done with the groove/rib 5.
The previously detailed dimensions have been found to be optimal for the application concerned by the invention. The depth P2 of the dimples 6 is optimized to increase the heat transfer without important increase of the pressure losses on the air side. Such fin 4 design is optimized in regards to different phenomenon impacting the air flow topology such as the creation of local turbulences and air guidance. To this regards, the dimples 6 depth P2, smaller than the groove/rib 5 depth P1, allows the creation of local horseshoe vortices accounting for high heat transfer coefficients in the upstream part of the tube 4. If the pitch D3 between two dimples 6 is too small, the dimples 6 have a negative impact on each others. Indeed, behind each dimple 6, a small recirculation area is created. If the dimples 6 are too close to each others, the recirculation areas will combine together and obstruct the air flow. If the distance between two dimples 6 is too important the local contribution of each dimple 6 will not sufficiently increase the heat transfer.
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The result of the performance increase of the Air Cooled Heat Exchanger can be turned in two different ways; either a global increase of the system performance to which the tube heat exchanger 1 is connected to, or a reduction of the tube heat exchanger 1 size. The latter will result in less material used for the same service as for conventional design.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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13161435.6 | Mar 2013 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/053142 | 2/18/2014 | WO | 00 |