Finned strainer
11361870 · 2022-06-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D29/333
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D29/333
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02E30/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B01D29/39
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D29/39
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present invention relates to filters used to remove debris from water being sucked into a piping system. It has particular application use in nuclear power plants, which, after a loss of coolant accident, must pump cooling water back into the reactor core from a collection sump. This water may contain various types of debris that must be removed before the water is sent back into the reactor cooling system. There are restrictions on the allowable pressure drop across the strainer and the space available for installing this equipment. The finned strainer of the present invention addresses these issues while maximizing the quantity of debris filtered from the water.
Claims
1. A filtering apparatus for a fluid intake to a collection header of a nuclear power generation facility, the filtering apparatus comprising: a perimeter frame; opposing filtering screens mounted to said perimeter frame, wherein opposing edges of the opposing filtering screens are spaced apart by the perimeter frame; and a spacer defining an enclosed volume between at least one of said opposing filtering screens and said spacer, said spacer configured for maintaining said spacer in spaced relation with said at least one opposing filtering screen, and for maintaining said opposing filtering screens in fixed spaced relation, said spacer and said at least one opposing filtering screen defining a plurality of non-intersecting flow channels between said spacer and the at least one opposing filtering screen, the plurality of non-intersecting flow channels extending through said enclosed volume; wherein the perimeter frame maintains the opposing filtering screens in spaced relationship with each other; wherein said opposing edges of the opposing filtering screens are fixed to a marginal side edge of said perimeter frame, and a cross-section of said marginal side edge is configured to fit a slot in the collection header; wherein the marginal side edge defines a plurality of openings; wherein each flow channel of the plurality of non-intersecting flow channels is configured to evacuate the fluid through a counterpart opening of the plurality of openings; and wherein the filtering apparatus is configured for fluid flow to enter through each opposing filtering screen, follow one flow channel of the plurality of non-intersecting flow channels formed by the at least one opposing filtering screen and the spacer, and evacuate the one flow channel to the collection header through one counterpart opening of the plurality of openings corresponding to the one flow channel of the plurality of non-intersecting flow channels.
2. The filtering apparatus of claim 1 wherein said opposing filtering screens are is formed of perforated metal sheet.
3. The filtering apparatus of claim 1, wherein said opposing filtering screens are formed of wire mesh.
4. The filtering apparatus of claim 1, wherein said spacer comprises a metal plate.
5. The filtering apparatus of claim 4, wherein said metal plate comprises a perforated metal plate that defines an inclined surface, relative to the opposing filtering screens.
6. The filtering apparatus of claim 4, wherein said spacer defines one or more peaks formed by converging metal surfaces.
7. The filtering apparatus of claim 6, wherein said spacer defines a plurality of alternating peaks and valleys.
8. The filtering apparatus of claim 7, wherein said spacer comprises a corrugated plate opposed to the at least one opposing filtering screen in reinforcing relationship.
9. The filtering apparatus of claim 1, wherein said spacer provides reinforcement for resisting seismic loads.
10. The filtering apparatus of claim 1, wherein the spacer is connected to the perimeter frame.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1)
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(3)
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(8)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(9) Referring to
(10) Water enters the strainer through fluid permeable screens 7 on the surface of the fins 4, leaving debris on the screens. Water then flows through the fluid flow channel in hollow core 8 of the fin 4 towards header 3. Various portions of header 3, particularly the portion between fin slots 9, may be made using fluid permeable material to increase the filtration area. Header 3 may have one or more baffle plates 12 to provide structural support for the sides to resist high suction pressures. Baffle plates 12 have large holes 13 to ensure flow velocity in the fluid flow channel in header 3 is the same above and below the baffle.
(11) The ends of each header 3 have flanges 14 that allow adjoining modules to be attached together. Modules may be attached together, or they may be independently mounted with seals between modules. Mounting frames 5 may be provided under the module. Mounting frames 5 have adjustable-height mounts 15 that allow the device to be installed on floors that are not level.
(12)
(13) Flow enters fins 49 in the same manner as described above in relation to the embodiment shown in
(14) Air ingestion can be prevented by ensuring that there is a sufficient height of water above the strainer. In the alternative, a horizontal cover (not shown) can be added over the fins. This cover allows the fins to be closer to the water surface without ingesting air or causing hollow-core vortices.
(15) Various types of bracing, such as those shown in
(16) For all applications, it is desirable to optimize the design for the type and quantity of debris that the strainer is required to handle. Two basic factors need to be considered: the filtration area required, and the potential volume of debris that must be accommodated within the strainer. The number of fins is determined by the required filtration area, and then fin spacing can be varied to ensure that there is sufficient space between fins to accommodate the potential debris volume. The strainer module is advantageously fabricated in a size that is easily manageable and can be moved into place without interference with surrounding equipment. In addition, a complete strainer assembly may contain as many strainer modules as necessary.
(17) Two types of fins that may be incorporated in the apparatus of the present invention are discussed below in relation to
(18) Flat-Surface Fin
(19) Referring now to
(20) If the application requires smaller filtration holes than are achievable using standard perforated metal mesh, a layer of fine wire mesh may be laminated onto the surface of perforated metal screens 16 of the fin.
(21) The advantages of the fin construction shown in
(22) Corrugated-Surface Fin
(23) Referring now to
(24) The corrugations provide a number of advantages. The large increase in filtration surface area over a flat screen is a very significant advantage for thin debris layers, which often pose more of a problem than more porous thick debris layers. The increased area reduces the restriction to flow entering the strainer by decreasing the water velocity through the screen and reducing the thickness of debris (because it is spread over a larger area). The “peaks” of the corrugations also reduce the pressure drop by tending to encourage a locally non-uniform debris bed. Even with layers of debris that are thicker than the height of the corrugations, there can be a significant benefit, because fine particulates often migrate through the debris bed and concentrate near the filtration surface, causing a thin relatively impermeable layer at the surface. The resistance of this thin layer to flow entering the strainer is reduced with the larger screen area achieved by the corrugations.
(25) Another important feature of this design is that the corrugated screens can be made strong enough to be relied on as the sole structural element in the fin. Moreover, the screen can also be formed using relatively thin gauge material. This minimizes the amount of material required to make a fin, saving cost and making the fins easier to handle because of their reduced weight.
(26) The corrugated metal mesh screens have a plurality of parallel “peaks” and “valleys” and are positioned in opposed spaced relation such that alternating peaks in one screen are in tip-to-tip contact with alternating peaks in the opposed screen. This configuration forms hollow internal channels for fluid entering the strainer to flow towards the collection header. These flow channels are unobstructed and can be made large enough to offer minimal restriction to flow.
(27) The internal volume of the design is minimized, therefore maximizing the space outside the strainer to collect debris.
(28) As shown in
(29) The perimeter frame about the fluid permeable screens can also comprise perforated metal caps 23 to seal the ends of the corrugations. The advantage of this type of end cap is that it adds to the perforated screen area and does not restrict flow access to the space between the fins. In the embodiment shown in
(30) The marginal side edge of the perimeter frame at the edge of the fin fitting into the header is adapted to a rectangular cross-section to fit the rectangular slots 9 in the header. This can be done using a toothed strip of perforated metal 24, with the edge sealed into the collection header with flexible metal strips 25 as shown in
(31) Flow Equalization
(32) Reasonably uniform flow is desirable to prevent formation of hollow-core vortexes and to ensure that debris depositing onto the strainer is not packed too densely. If the flow concentrates at one spot, debris will quickly build up at this spot in a very dense mat, raising the flow resistance enough that flow will enter at an adjacent spot, causing a dense bed to build up there also. If unrestrained, this can progress throughout the whole strainer, causing a much higher pressure loss than if the debris had built up uniformly.
(33) In a further embodiment of the present invention shown in
(34) In accordance with a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, the flow-balancing devices provide flow restriction in a partially reversible fashion. Thus, the energy required to accelerate the flow through the flow-balancing devices is converted first to kinetic energy as a jet of water in the header pointed in the direction of flow towards the suction end. The momentum of this jet is used to boost the pressure in the header in a manner that partially offsets the upstream friction and acceleration losses. This pressure boost reduces the amount of pressure imbalance along the length of the header. A substantially uniform flow can be achieved at the same time as providing a lower overall pressure loss.
(35)
(36) Fluid flow 25 enters fin-like strainer element 32 through perforated screens, passes through the internal channels formed by the corrugations which are in fluid communication with header 35 through end cap 41 (see
(37) The pressure in the main header 35 drops as one moves closer to the pump intake because of friction and acceleration pressure drops. The differential pressure across orifices closer to the pump intake are therefore greater than across orifices farther away. In order to balance the flows entering the main header, the width of each orifice 33, 34 is selected so that the pressures upstream of all orifices, e.g., through each of the collection channels 38, 37 are equal. Substantially equal pressure can be achieved by providing that orifices closer to the pump intake have smaller flow area than orifices farther from the pump intake with the result that substantially uniform fluid flow is maintained through strainer elements located at different positions along the flowpath in header 3.
(38) A flow control device in the form of an appropriately sized and shaped orifice can be provided for individual collection channels each of which encloses a plurality of apertures (as shown in
(39) Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs.
(40) The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of this application.