Temperature glide thermosyphon and heat pipe
09777967 · 2017-10-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F28D15/046
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D15/043
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F28D15/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D15/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Fluid to fluid heat exchange processes involve the hot fluid reducing in temperature and the cold fluid increasing in temperature. To transfer heat between the two fluids, a third, separated heat transfer fluid is often used. The present invention allows for passive heat transfer between the two fluids, using a separate heat transfer fluid, while enabling heat absorption and rejection through a continuously variable temperature.
Claims
1. A thermosyphon system; comprising an evaporator; a condenser; a liquid line fluidly coupling the condenser to the evaporator; a vapor line fluidly coupling the evaporator to the condenser; a refrigerant, wherein the refrigerant vaporizes as it progresses through the evaporator, passes through the vapor line from the evaporator to the condenser wherein vapor condenses to a liquid and passes through the liquid line from the condenser to the evaporator; wherein the evaporator, condenser, liquid line and vapor line operate at substantially the same pressure; wherein the refrigerant is a non-azeotropic mixture of two or more fluids; and wherein a condenser coolant flows counter to the refrigerant inside the condenser.
2. The thermosyphon system of claim 1, wherein a hot fluid external to the thermosyphon system releases heat to the evaporator as it flows counter to the refrigerant inside the evaporator.
3. The thermosyphon system of claim 1, wherein the liquid line includes a U-shaped liquid trap.
4. The thermosyphon system of claim 1, wherein the liquid line includes a U-shaped liquid trap and further includes a liquid collection chamber downstream of the liquid trap.
5. The thermosyphon system of claim 1, wherein the liquid line includes a flow control valve.
6. The thermosyphon system of claim 1, wherein the evaporator is a fin and tube design, and one or more of the evaporator tubes have grooves that are approximately 0.5 mm to 2.0 mm wide and approximately 0.5 mm to 2.0 mm high.
7. The thermosyphon system of claim 1, wherein the evaporator is a fin and tube design, and one or more of the evaporator tubes have grooves that are approximately 0.5 mm to 2.0 mm wide and approximately 0.5 mm to 2.0 mm high, and wherein one or more U-bend brazing connections consist of a grooved tubes.
8. The thermosyphon system of claim 1, wherein multiple evaporators are fluidly coupled in series.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(13) A temperature glide thermosyphon (TGT) is a passive, two-phase heat transfer device in which gravity returns liquid from the condenser to the evaporator. The thermosyphon is charged with a non-azeotropic mixture of fluids. The basic principles of operation are presented in
(14) In the evaporator 100, the refrigerant flows 104 counter to the hot fluid 105 entering it. A close up view of the evaporator 100 is presented in
(15) In the condenser 101, the coolant 107 and the refrigerant flow 112 counter to one-another. The detailed condensation process and corresponding points on the phase diagram are presented in
(16) The net effect of the TGT system, is that a counter-flow heat exchanger effect may be induced by a single, self-circulating refrigerant loop, transferring heat between a hot and cold fluid stream. The maximum counter-flow effect that can be achieved is when the temperature glide effect approaches the temperature difference between the entering temperatures of the hot fluid 105 and the coolant fluid 107. If the temperature glide effect is greater than the temperature difference between the hot fluid in 105 and the coolant inlet 107, then the refrigerant circulation pattern won't start and no heat will be transferred between the two fluid streams.
(17) The refrigerant can be any mixture of fluids that are miscible and are non-azeotropic. Some examples of potential mixtures are R134a and R245fa, R1234yf and R1234ze, water and methanol, water and ethanol, water and ammonia, and many more. To achieve the desired temperature glide effect, selection of working fluid combinations and fractions of each component is important. For instance, a mixture of R134a and R245fa can be selected in various proportions to get varying temperature glide effects, as presented in TABLE 1. A 50/50 mixture has a maximum effect of 14 C, while a 90/10 mixture only has a 5.5 C maximum effect.
(18) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Various temperature glide effects of a binary mixture HFC 134a HFC 245fa composition, by composition, by Temperature weight weight Glide Effect 50% 50% 14° C. 75 25 10.5 90 10 5.5 100 0 0
(19) When transferring heat between two sensible fluid streams, a nearly constant change in enthalpy per change in temperature,
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of the evaporating and condensing refrigerant blend is a favorable characteristic, especially when the hot fluid and cold fluid release and gain sensible heat. It is important to note that the change of enthalpy versus temperature is not the specific heat, as it involves a phase change process, although the definition is the same. As the temperature glide effect increases, the change in enthalpy versus change in temperature tends to have peaks at both the high and low end of temperatures, with a valley in the middle, when a binary mixture is used. Mixtures of more than two components, are also possible, and can be engineered to give more constant change rate of change of enthalpy versus temperature. An example ternary mixture is propane plus iso-butane plus pentane. As the desired temperature glide effect increases, the number of mixture components can also increase.
(21) The TGT is very beneficial for gas to gas or air to gas heat exchanger operations, since ducting can take up a lot of space to route air streams to the appropriate places. Also, in gas to air applications, the material selections may be driven by a single gas stream with contaminants, such as acids in combustion exhaust, where a separate gas stream (ambient air) may have less stringent material requirements. Limiting the expensive material to one heat exchanger, can represent major cost savings.
(22) The evaporator and condenser for an air or gas heat exchanger may be a fin and tube type. The tube 113 routing of a fin 114 and tube type evaporator is presented in
(23) Since refrigerant flow is driven by gravity, the overall impedance (pressure loss) to the refrigerant flow must be less than the gravitational potential available in the system integration. In some applications, this pressure loss is small relative to active systems (e.g. a vapor compression cycle), therefore, the relative vapor and liquid velocities inside the tubes must be low. Since these velocities are low, special consideration needs to be taken in the evaporator so that the liquid and vapor does not stratify (liquid pools on bottom of tube), since the liquid needs to wet the entire internal perimeter to achieve maximum performance. In this scenario, tubing with grooves is necessary, as shown in
(24) When a fin and tube heat exchanger is manufactured, the tubes are usually formed as hair pins, and are brazed with a u-bend segment to connect the open end of adjacent tubes. For the TGT, it may be necessary to use a grooved u-bend segment, versus a smooth inner bore, so that liquid continuously wets the top surface. At the transition between the straight segment and the u-bend, the spacing of the grooves needs to be close, so that liquid continuity is maintained. Close spacing may be achieved by chamfering the straight segment and the u-bend, so they fit like a bevel. Inserts, or other methods, may be used to ensure a continuous groove is maintained.
(25) In some circumstances, additional measures may need to be taken to ensure the refrigerant flows in the intended direction.
(26) Additional design elements may be added to the TGT to increase the functionality or lessen constraints of the system. One of these features is a liquid collection chamber 118. The chamber 118 can hold a reservoir of liquid, and contain vapor at the top. If the volume of this chamber is large compared to the liquid line connecting the condenser 101 to the evaporator 100, then small changes in liquid height in the reservoir can lead to large changes in liquid pressure head that drive the system. Since the vapor flow 112 is passively activated by a heat source 105, the refrigerant flow is controlled only by the heat input. The reservoir 118 helps ensure that there is enough gravitational pressure head to support the heat load. The reservoir 118 can help alleviate some of the sensitivity of the initial refrigerant charge, since too much or too little refrigerant in the TGT can lead to degraded performance.
(27) Another, optional feature that can be implemented in the TGT is a flow control valve 119. This valve can be controlled by a control system, or manually. Without the valve, the TGT will transfer heat from the hot air stream 105 to the cold air stream 107. The valve, can be open and allow this heat to be transferred, closed, to stop the circulation of refrigerant, and thus stop the heat transfer, or somewhere in between, to allow for a specific amount of heat to be transferred.
(28) One application where flow control on the TGT is useful, is on a heat recovery unit, around an evaporator coil 121 of a vapor compression (VC) refrigeration cycle, as shown in
(29) Another consideration for the TGT is that gravity has been described as the primary force to enable the passive circulation of refrigerant flow. Any inertial force may be used to provide the needed pressure head to drive the self-circulation. One such force is a centrifugal force. In this case, the evaporator would be located at a radius that is greater than the condenser, with respect to the rotating axis.
(30) When an inertial force can't be guaranteed, capillarity may be used to pump liquid. When capillarity is used, the device can be called a temperature glide heat pipe (TGHP). A representation of the TGHP is shown in
(31) Suitable refrigerants for the TGHP will have a relative high latent heat and a relatively high surface tension. The refrigerant can be any non-azeotropic mixture of fluids. Some examples are ammonia and water, and methanol and water.
(32) The TGT and TGHP can both be utilized to manage electronic components. A schematic of an electronics system 125 is presented in