The present invention relates to evaporative condensers and coolers.
In certain cooling/refrigeration system, evaporative condensers receive superheated refrigerant gas from a cooling/refrigeration system compressor and cool/condense it to refrigerant liquid, which condensed refrigerant liquid is then return to a cooling/refrigeration system evaporator for cooling/refrigeration of a desired space. The evaporative condensers include a series of round or slightly elliptical serpentine tubes through which the refrigerant passes. Water is flowed over the tubes containing the refrigerant, allowing heat to be transferred from the refrigerant to the water via indirect heat exchange and causing the superheated refrigerant gas to condense to liquid. The heated water in turn is cooled by direct heat exchange with ambient air as the water and ambient air pass over the tubes and/or through fill material.
The present invention is a new design for evaporative refrigerant condensers including an indirect refrigerant condensing tube bundle heat exchanger with single pass (no serpentine) extremely narrow elliptical tubes (ratios of tube height to tube width of 3:1 to 16:1) to increase the refrigerant velocity (void fraction). For example, for a nominal tube diameter 1″ round tube, the preferred tube width of the tubes of the invention is approximately 0.1 inches to 0.5 inches, outside diameter, with tube height about 1.4 inches to 1.6 inches, outside diameter (vertical axis of ellipse). Similarly, at the other end of nominal tube diameter spectrum, for a nominal diameter ¼″ round tube, the preferred tube width of the tubes of the invention is approximately 0.025 inches to 0.125 inches, outside diameter, with tube height about 0.3 inches to 0.4 inches, outside diameter (vertical axis of ellipse).
Each single pass tube terminates at one end at an inlet refrigerant header and at the other end at an outlet refrigerant header. The tubes may be galvanized or stainless steel. The tubes may be provided with a flared inlet to reduce inlet refrigerant pressure loss. According to a preferred embodiment, tube spacing may be approximately 0.5 inches to 0.75 inches, center to center. According to another embodiment, each tube may be offset vertically relative to adjacent tubes to reduce air dP loss so that adjacent tubes nest into one-another.
This design reduces the cross sectional refrigerant flow area significantly, thus significantly reducing the required refrigerant charge, while maintaining the external heat exchange surface and thus heat exchange capacity, resulting in an unexpected increase in efficiency of more than 20% relative to the same device with serpentine elliptical tubes.
According to a first embodiment of the invention, the refrigerant condensing tube bundle of the invention may be substituted for the serpentine coil from a standard evaporative closed circuit cooler/condenser.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the refrigerant condensing tube bundle described above may be combined with (placed into) an otherwise standard counterflow direct evaporative cooling tower to create a new type of evaporative refrigerant condenser/cooling tower. According to various alternative embodiments, the tube bundle may be used as the structural support for fill, supporting various amounts of fill height, for example, but not limited to, 6 inches, 1′, 1.5′, 2′, 2.5′, 3′, 3.5′, 4′ or more of film fill height, or any amounts in between. According to these tube-bundle-as-fill-support embodiments, the bottom fill bundles should preferably be run perpendicular to the condenser tubes for best water distributions on the tubes. Standard cooling tower nozzle arrangements may be used with water flow rates as low as 2 gpm/sf, with preferable amounts of 4 gpm/sf to 10 gpm/sf, and more preferably from around 5 gpm/sf to 7 gpm/sf.
According to some embodiments, the tubes in the tube bundle may have a slight slope from horizontal to allow for drainage of liquid refrigerant.
According to various different embodiments of lengths of the tubes of the tube bundle may run either long or short way across the tower depending on thermal and refrigerant load.
According to an alternative embodiment, the tube bundle of the invention may be used in a counterflow closed circuit cooler arrangement in which the fan, water distribution nozzles, heat and mass exchange fill and air inlets are all positioned above a water redistribution basin, which in turn is positioned above a closed circuit cooler coil of the invention. This embodiment produces a substantial reduction in height due to the lack of serpentine tube bends in the tube bundle of the invention. The tube spacing of the present invention used in a counterflow closed circuit cooler can be much tighter with less space between tubes, since only water and no air needs to flow between tubes.
According to further alternative counterflow embodiments, the coil bundle of the invention may be located just above the fill and below the spray nozzles.
According to further embodiments, the tube bundle of the invention may be used with various crossflow arrangements. According to one such embodiment, the tube bundle is located above the crossflow fill and below the nozzle distribution system and air flows downward through the tubes before exiting to the fan plenum. According to another such embodiment, the tube bundles of the invention may be located above, below and in the middle of the crossflow fill. According to this embodiment, no air passes over the tubes, only water, as the cooled water flows from one fill section down to the next.
A more detailed description of the invention is set forth below with reference to the following figures.
Referring to
In either case, the lack of return bends as in the prior art serpentine tubes substantially reduces the height of the tube bundle for the same capacity. Horizontal tube spacing is preferably 0.5 inches to 0.75 inches, center to center. The spacing between adjacent tube sides is preferably 0.25 to 0.65 inches. Vertical tube spacing is preferably 0.5 inches to 2.0 inches, center to center.
According to further embodiments, the tube bundles of the invention may be located above (
Having now fully set forth the preferred embodiments and certain modifications of the concept underlying the present invention, various other embodiments as well as certain variations and modifications of the embodiments herein shown and described will obviously occur to those skilled in the art upon becoming familiar with said underlying concept. It should be understood, therefore, that the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically set forth herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62365435 | Jul 2016 | US |