Horizontal rotary compressor with enhanced tiltability during operation
11655820 · 2023-05-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F04C29/026
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C29/028
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C18/34
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C29/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C23/008
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C2240/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F04C29/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C23/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
This disclosure describes new horizontal roller-piston/vane type rotary compressors with novel features such as new lubricating oil circuit designs to provide reliable oil lubrication, and increase tiltability during operation. Also new multi-pump configurations of horizontal compressors are introduced in order to significantly increase redundancy, reliability, and turn down ratio. Rotary compressors may be configured with subsets of the disclosed features to configure those compressors for specific applications.
Claims
1. A horizontal compressor comprising: a shell divided into a motor space and a pump space by a separator, wherein the separator has an oil passage at a lower part of the separator and a gas passage in an upper part connecting the motor space and the pump space; a motor positioned in the motor space; a first sump positioned in a lower part of the motor space; a second sump positioned in a lower part of the pump space; a discharge valve, wherein discharge gas out of the discharge valve enters the motor space and goes through the motor to provide cooling for the motor and exits the motor into a discharge tube positioned at an end of the motor space; and a gas tube having a first end and a second end, wherein the first end is connected to the gas passage of the separator and the second end extends toward and juts into the discharge tube without blocking the discharge tube, wherein flow of the discharge gas flowing around the end of the gas tube and entering into the discharge tube induces flow of gas from the pump space into the motor space by a jet pump effect which lowers the pressure in the pump space, wherein lowering the pressure in the pump space causes oil from the first sump in the lower part of the motor space to flow into the second sump in the lower part of the pump space, wherein the second sump is positioned at an elevation higher than an elevation of the first sump such that an equilibrium is reached between the oil pumping force of the first sump and the oil pumping force of the second sump.
2. The horizontal compressor of claim 1, further comprising an oil supply tube attached to the oil passage of the separator along a bottom of the shell, wherein an end of the oil supply tube is configured to remain submerged in oil at a maximum allowable tilt angle.
3. The horizontal compressor of claim 2, further comprising a flange nose, wherein the oil supply tube is attached to the flange nose, and wherein the oil supply tube is fixed in its orientation with respect to an axis of the horizontal compressor.
4. The horizontal compressor of claim 2, wherein the oil supply tube includes one or more valves configured to open or close depending on an orientation of the horizontal compressor.
5. The horizontal compressor of claim 4, wherein the one or more valves are gravity actuated valves.
6. The horizontal compressor of claim 4, wherein the one or more valves are electrically actuated valves.
7. The horizontal compressor of claim 1, further comprising a first pump and a second pump disposed inside of the shell, wherein the first pump is controlled by a first brushless direct current (BLDC) drive, and wherein the second pump is controlled by a second BLDC drive.
8. The horizontal compressor of claim 7, wherein the first BLDC drive and second BLDC drive are controlled by a common controller.
9. The horizontal compressor of claim 7, wherein the first pump and second pump face each other.
10. The horizontal compressor of claim 7, wherein the first pump and second pump face away from each other.
11. The horizontal compressor of claim 1, wherein the shell is shaped as a cylinder.
12. The horizontal compressor of claim 1, wherein the shell is non-cylindrical and includes a bulge configured to store oil.
13. The horizontal compressor of claim 12, wherein the bulge is a circumferential bulge.
14. A horizontal compressor comprising: a shell divided into a motor space and a pump space by a separator, wherein the separator has an oil passage at a lower part of the separator and a gas passage in an upper part connecting the motor space and the pump space; a motor positioned in the motor space including a rotor and a stator separated by a gap; a pump assembly positioned in the pump space; an oil supply tube attached to the oil passage along a bottom portion of the shell; a sump positioned in a lower part of the motor space, wherein the sump is configured to feed oil into the pump assembly via the oil supply tube; and a discharge valve, wherein discharge gas out of the discharge valve enters the motor space and goes through the gap to provide cooling for the motor and exits the motor into a discharge tube positioned at an end of the motor space.
15. The horizontal compressor of claim 14, wherein the oil supply tube includes one or more valves configured to open or close depending on an orientation of the horizontal compressor.
16. The horizontal compressor of claim 15, wherein the one or more valves are gravity actuated valves.
17. The horizontal compressor of claim 15, wherein the one or more valves are electrically actuated valves.
18. A horizontal compressor comprising: a shell divided into a motor space and a pump space by a separator, wherein the separator has an oil passage at a lower part of the separator and a gas passage in an upper part connecting the motor space and the pump space; a motor positioned in the motor space; a pump assembly positioned in the pump space; a first sump positioned in a lower part of the motor space, wherein the first sump is configured to feed oil into the pump assembly via the oil passage; a second sump positioned in a lower part of the pump space; and an oil supply tube attached to the oil passage along a bottom portion of the shell, wherein an end of the oil supply tube is configured to remain submerged in oil at a maximum allowable tilt angle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(46) This disclosure describes new horizontal roller-piston/vane type rotary compressors with novel features such as new lubricating oil circuit designs to provide reliable oil lubrication, and increase tiltability during operation. Also new multi-pump configurations of horizontal compressors are introduced in order to significantly increase redundancy, reliability, and turn down ratio. By combining an appropriate set of these new features, the new horizontal compressors will be useful to a wide range of stationary and mobile applications, both existing and emerging. They would enable new compact cooling system configurations that are well suited for applications that favors extremely low height in a horizontal system configuration or small front-to-back depth in a vertical system configuration.
(47) Most rotary compressors commercially available and used are vertical compressors designed to operate with the axis of rotation of their mechanical pump and the motor in a gravitationally vertical orientation with tiltability of up to 30-degree solid angle off the vertical orientation. The dotted rectangle denoted by a-a-a-a in
(48) However, their relatively tall height presents an insurmountable obstacle to build low height cooling systems. For example, it would be quite desirable to have vapor compression cooling or heating systems with a very low height configuration in many applications including a low height, rack mounted cooling systems or other height limited applications such as vapor compression air conditioners or heat pumps for automobiles or air transportation systems where the available height comes at a premium or an adequate height is not available for a desired cooling or heating capacity while the lateral space is more readily available. In vertical compressors, in order to increase capacity, the height of the compressor may need to be increased which would make it all the more difficult to keep the system height low. In contrast, it is much easier to put multiple pump-motor sets in a horizontal configuration by utilizing the available lateral space without raising the height while doubling or tripling the system capacity depending on the number of pump-motor sets within. It also turns out in the new horizontal configurations in this disclosure, it would be possible to increase the acceptable range of tilting for the new horizontal rotary compressors well beyond what has been traditionally possible with vertical rotary compressors further expanding the usefulness of horizontal rotary compressors.
(49) For these reasons, horizontal rotary compressors would be a natural choice for low height preferred cooling or heat pump systems in a horizontal vapor compression system configuration and low front-to-back depth cooling systems in a vertical vapor compression system configuration. In certain other applications such as for mobile applications where low height and ability to perform in various orientation during operation, it would be also desirable to have the maximum allowable operational tilt (pitch and roll) angle to be as high as possible from the nominally horizontal/lateral orientation. In certain applications, much higher cooling or heating capacity may be required within the same low height system. In certain other situations, the long life, high reliability and redundancy of a compressor in case when preventing premature compressor failure becomes an important system requirement. The new horizontal rotary compressors described in this disclosure can be used in all of these applications.
(50) It is not a requirement that a horizontal compressor designed using features as described herein be universally useful. Rather, various embodiments of horizontal rotary compressors may be constructed by including a subset of the features described herein in order to build a horizontal rotary compressor incorporating only the right set of features for each specific application. For example, the following list gives an idea on key desired characteristics or features for each specific application: Data Center Server Rack cooling: high reliability, low vibration, redundancy, long life (100,000 hours or higher) and very high energy efficiency resulting in significant reduction in overall data center wide energy use through distributed cooling for individual server racks Medical Equipment cooling: high reliability, medium life (50,000 to 100,000 hours), low noise and vibration, and redundancy Air conditioning, heating and cooling for EV's, utility vehicles, trains, airplanes, helicopters: high energy efficiency, reliability, medium life (50,000 to 100,000 hours), medium tiltability up to 30-degree solid angle off nominal orientation Laser projector and robot cooling: high tiltability up to 90 degree solid angle orientation, high reliability, low noise and vibration, redundancy, and shorter life (10,000 to 50,000 hours) Inner city 5G kiosk cooling: high reliability, long life (100,000 hours or higher) and redundancy There are two general design directions in order to make the new horizontal rotary compressors useful to a wide spectrum of applications. Adequate Oil Supply—Ensure that the oil is supplied to the pump parts satisfactorily in as wide a range of operating tilt angle (pitch and roll angle) with respect to the nominally horizontal axis of the pump as possible at affordable/appropriate cost for each category of application. Multi-pump Configuration—Increase the capacity, turn down ratio with nearly constant high efficiency, life expectancy, reliability and/or redundancy of a horizontal rotary compressor without increasing the height of the horizontal compressor much if any.
Adequate Oil Supply
(51) The oil in roller piston/vane type compressors defined herein as rolling piston compressor, concentric vane compressor or swing compressors perform the two critical functions: lubrication for moving parts, and sealing between moving parts. It is therefore of critical importance to maintain adequate oil supply under the potential operating conditions. New approaches to the satisfactory oil supply in a horizontal rotary compressor are summarized below and further described in ensuing sections: a. High-shell/Low-shell horizontal rotary compressor—One oil sump configuration. Raise or maintain the oil level on the pump side and supply oil directly to the pump's internal space without an oil sump in the motor space using the high-performance model of a horizontal rotary compressor b. High-shell horizontal rotary compressor—Jet pump approach—A two-oil sump configuration in a high-shell rotary compressor with a separator between the motor space and the pump space to induce slight pressure differential between the motor space and the pump space. This uses a jet pump actuated by the discharge gas but without their disadvantages of insufficient motor cooling or undesirable heating of the compressor pump to raise the oil level on the pump space higher than that of the motor space to ensure oil intake port on the outboard flange nose or the end of the oil tube extending from the flange nose is submerged in oil at higher tilt angles. Optional oil supply tube and pressure equalization tube which can be extended to satisfy the operational requirement. For example, the oil tube can end at the mid span of the motor so that the pitch angle can be extended in both forward and backward directions, or extend all the way toward the end of the motor space for maximum pitch angle capability toward the motor. c. High shell rotary compressor—a single sump approach. A separator between the motor space and pump space that acts as an oil dam. Oil sump only in motor space. Direct oil feed to the pump. For example, the oil tube can end at the mid span of the motor so that the pitch angle can be extended in both forward and backward directions, or extend all the way toward the end of the motor space for maximum pitch angle capability toward the motor. d. Shell geometric solutions: “Puffer fish” shell design will give “buffer” for oil supplies in cases of short term and/or rapid extreme tilting in addition to slightly increased tiltability. e. Valve solution: the intake tube can be fitted with valves that get activated by gravity or by electronic means according to the pitch and roll angle with respect to the horizontal axis of the pump.
a. High-Shell/Low-Shell Design:
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(53) Before exiting the shell 3 through the discharge tube 14, most of oil contained in the discharge gas drops to the bottom of the shell 3 where it forms an oil sump 15 in the motor space 16 and oil sump 17 in the expanded “puffer fish” shaped shell of pump space 18.
(54) The separator 6 as shown in
(55) Going back to
(56) This is to prevent the situation that the oil level gets high enough to get into the annular gap decreasing the discharge gas flow area in the annular gap, increasing the friction in the motor due to the presence of the oil in the annular gap and foaming up the oil thereby reducing the viscosity, lubricity and increasing the friction, leakage within the pump assembly which will in turn reduce the performance of the compressor in terms of less cooling or heating and higher power consumption. Once the oil gets to the sump in the pump space, an optional oil suction tube is connected to the axial cavity in the crank shaft as was shown in
(57) As mentioned briefly previously, depending on where the oil tube 21 ends, the operationally allowable pitch angle will change. If it extends all the way toward the end of the motor along the bottom of the shell, it will favor pitching down toward the motor, i.e., clockwise pitch angle operation. If there is a short or no oil tube, it will favor pitching down toward the pump, i.e., counter clockwise pitch angle operation. As a means of keeping the tilt angle (pitch and roll angles) equally in both clockwise and counter clockwise pitch angles, the example shown in
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(59) c. High shell rotary compressor-a single sump approach: This configuration is also for a high-shell horizontal rotary compressor as shown in
(60) d. Shell geometric solutions: “Puffer fish” gives “buffer” for oil supplies in cases of short term and/or rapid extreme tilting in addition to slightly increased tiltability. One can also have the optional “puffer fish” bulge at the bottom of the oil sump 17 as was shown in
(61) e. Valve Solution:
(62) This is to increase the tilt angle even further for special high tilt applications. This configuration utilizes an oil intake tube with one or two gravity, piezo-electrically or electro-mechanically actuated flow control valves to draw the oil from the sump in the correct direction. If it is done electrically, one can envision a control valve located right before the partition: open to the entire length of the tube allowing the oil to be sucked up from the end of the tube, closed to the entire length of the tube but open to the oil port near the partition within the motor space. In
(63) The shape of the gravity actuated valves can have many configurations. It can be a trap door on a hinge or a ball valve in a contoured socket. In both cases, the gravity will cause the trap door or the ball valve open or close. The design details involving a spherical ball and a contoured funnel as a valve and valve seat is shown in
(64) The oil intake valve 2 has two paths for the oil: one is internal path/grooves 27 for the oil that allows the flow of oil coming through the oil intake valve 1 whether the oil intake valve 2 is open or closed. The other is a set of ports 28 to communicate with the oil sump outside the tube and when the ball is in the “socket”, the port to the sump is closed and when the ball is out of the spherical socket and in the cylindrical section, the oil intake port 2 opens letting in oil from the sump into the oil tube, flowing in the grooves past the ball and into the mid plate and to the internal pump parts.
(65) When the motor side is pointing down vertically and the pump side is pointing up. The ball valve (
(66) When the motor side is on top and the pump side is at the bottom, the oil intake valve 1 is closed because the ball dropped into the spherical valve seat and the closed valve prevents any refrigerant vapor from coming in that may create vapor lock. In the meantime, the oil intake valve 2 (
(67) This configuration enables operation of the horizontal compressor in any pitch angle even though the allowable roll angle varies as a function of the pitch angle as shown in
Comparison of Tiltability of Various Configurations
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Brief Discussion on the Applicability of the Above Features to Scroll Compressors
(69) Even though description of tiltabilty enhancement so far has been limited to roller-piston/vane type compressors such as rolling piston compressor, concentric vane compressor and swing compressor, similar/equivalent arrangements can be made to make scroll compressors more tilt tolerant during operation. The difference will be the geometry of oil supply route from the outside the pump set to the inside of the scroll compressor's pump assembly.
Enhanced Reliability, Redundancy, High Turn-Down Ratio with Nearly Constant Efficiency, and Increased Capacity with the Same Low Height of the Compressor and Vapor Compression System
(70) It is quite desirable to have a cooling system that has high cooling efficiency over a wide range of cooling capacity, and maintain high efficiency over a high turn down ratio so that the cooling system does not have to be turned on and off frequently to maintain a set temperature within prescribed limits.
(71) It is also very desirable to have extraordinarily high reliability of the cooling system than current vapor compression systems based on commercially available vertical or horizontal rotary compressors especially in a distributed cooling or heating systems where the system failure can be catastrophic to the local system such as a dedicated cooling system inside a server cabinet in a data center or military systems. Most of the rotary compressors have efficiencies that start low at low speed, goes highest at a medium speed and decreases as speed increases to its maximum while the turn down ratios are generally less than 5 even for the best variable-speed-compressor based systems. The reliability desired/required in a distributed cooling system for a server rack or a dedicated system for communication can be much higher than what the vapor compression system and refrigerant compressor industries can deliver in an affordable manner unless two independent cooling systems are used.
(72) In short, the deficiencies of the currently available refrigeration compressors in general, vertical or horizontal, are: height of the vertical compressor may be too tall for a low headroom cooling system such as 2U compatible cooling system; tiltability is limited for conventional horizontal compressors, efficiency changes too much over the operating speed range, limited turn down ratio requiring undesirable frequent on-off operation thereby lowering the COP or SEER of the vapor compression system.
(73) All these concerns can be addressed by having multiple number of pump-motor sets controlled separately by separate BLDC drives within a shell. Two pump-motor sets will enable operating them one at a time, both at the same time at lower speed or operating at different speeds to get optimal performance, etc. all controlled by the controller of the vapor compression system. Because the rest of the vapor compression system may be designed to handle two compressors at maximum speed, when only one is used or both are used at lower speed, the heat exchangers will be oversized and the heat exchanger performance will be excellent and system performance will be high at part load as well as full load over a wide range of cooling capacity. This will also increase the longevity of the pump sets as well as that of the vapor compression system. When one compressor fails for some reason, the other can take over and the controller can detect the failure and notify the system operator to replace the unit. The inherent redundancy of the multi pump-motor-BLDC drive sets within a single shell will significant enhance the reliability of the whole vapor compression system. The multi pump-motor set configuration shown as examples below uses only two identical pump assemblies with independent motor drives inside a single shell laid out in a horizontal orientation. Of course, one can use more than two sets of pump-motor. The two pump/motor assemblies can come in many different configurations depending on the way they are oriented with each other in terms of the pump-motor assembly, whether there is a separator between the two pump-motor assembly, whether the compressor is a high shell or high/low shell compressor, the locations where the oil from the oil sump is taken, and oil level boosting methods such as jet pump, methods of oil supply into the internal moving parts of the pump is either using two sumps or a single sump, etc. Only a subset of representative configurations will be given but this disclosure does not preclude any combinations that are not described explicitly. The pumps shown herein to illustrate various options or variations are all basic twin cylinder pumps.
Brief Discussion on the Applicability of the Above Features to Scroll Compressors
(74) Even though description of various configurations of multi pump-motor set horizontal compressors so far has been limited to roller-piston/vane type compressors such as rolling piston compressor, concentric vane compressor and swing compressor, similar/equivalent arrangements can be made to make horizontal scroll compressors with multiple pump-motor sets with similar ensuing advantages such as higher capacity, high part load efficiency, reliability, redundancy, etc. The difference will be in the geometry of oil supply route from the outside the pump set to the inside of the scroll compressor's pump assembly.
Examples of Vapor Compression Systems Using the New Horizontal Compressors
(75) The following examples show, without excluding others, how the new horizontal compressors with many new advantages can be used in new ways that were not possible before:
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Other Examples
(78) In some embodiments, a high-shell, nominally horizontally operating (“horizontal” herein after), roller piston/vane or scroll type, oil lubricated rotary compressor includes a space within the shell that is maintained at near its discharge pressure but divided into two spaces by a separator, one called motor space and the other pump space. The separator has an oil passage at the lower part and a gas passage in the upper part connecting the motor side and the pump side. The discharge gas out of the discharge valve enters the motor side first and goes through the motor to provide cooling for the motor and exits the motor into the discharge tube at the end of the motor side. In some embodiments, the compressor includes a gas tube, one end of which is connected to the gas passage of the separator and the other end extended toward and juts into the discharge tube without blocking the discharge tube, where the discharging gas flowing around the end of the gas tube and entering into the discharge tube induces flow of gas from the pump space into the motor space by the jet pump effect. The jet pump effect pulls the gas out of the pump space through the gas tube into the discharge tube, thereby lowering the pressure in the pump space slightly below discharge pressure causing the oil from the sump in the lower part of the motor space at discharge pressure flow into the sump in the lower part of the pump space. The flow of oil creates the pressure drop through the oil passage in the separator either in the form of an orifice at the lower section of the separator or a tube attached to the oil passage in the separator and extending into the motor space along the bottom of the shell in the motor space. The combination of the fact that the jet pump slightly decreases the pressure in the pump space to a pressure slightly lower than that of the motor space which is at discharge pressure, and the fact that there is a pressure drop in the oil flow path ensures that there is a pressure difference between the two spaces that causes the oil from the oil sump in the motor space to move to the oil sump in the pump space. In some embodiments, the level of oil sump in the pump space may be elevated higher than that of the oil sump in the motor space until an equilibrium is reached between the oil pumping force due to pressure difference between the two spaces and the gravitational force acting on the oil contained in the increased height portion of the oil sump in the pump space is achieved. The increased height of the oil sump level in the pump space contributes to ensuring adequate oil supply to the moving parts of the pump assembly and also increase the capability to operate in higher tilt angles without performance degradation. Such an embodiment is substantially similar to or natural extension of the embodiment shown in
(79) In some embodiments, a high-shell, horizontal, roller piston/vane or scroll type, horizontal compressor includes a space within the shell that is maintained at the discharge pressure but divided by a separator that acts as an oil dam between the motor space and the pump space with an oil passage at the lower part of the separator and a gas pressure equalization passage for the motor space and pump space at the upper part of the separator or above the separator. In some embodiments, the discharge gas out of the discharge valve enters the motor side and goes through the gap between the rotor and stator and/or outside the stator to provide cooling of the motor and exits the motor space into the discharge tube at the end of the motor space. In some embodiments, there is only one oil sump inside the shell which is in the motor space. In some embodiments, the oil from the sump flows directly into the pump assembly via an oil passage provided within one of a plurality of flanges, mid-plate in the case of a twin cylinder compressor, or through a tube connected to the flange nose substantially similar to the embodiment of
(80) In some embodiments, there is an oil supply tube attached to oil passage of the separator along the bottom of the shell with an appropriate length in order to ensure the end of the tube is still submerged in oil at a maximum allowable tilt angle clockwise and counterclockwise.
(81) In some embodiments, a high-shell/low-shell, horizontal, roller piston/vane or scroll type, rotary compressor includes a pressure sealing separator between the motor space at low pressure that is independently controlled and the pump space at discharge pressure, where the oil in the sump on the motor space at discharge pressure directly feeds into the pump assembly via an oil passage provided in one of the flanges. The oil passage may be mid-plate in the case of a twin cylinder compressor, or through a tube connected to the flange nose where there may be an oil supply tube attached to oil passage of the separator along the bottom of the shell with an appropriate length in order to ensure the end of the tube is still submerged in oil at a maximum desired/allowable clockwise and counterclockwise pitch angle for the motor side.
(82) In some embodiments, the oil supply tube comes equipped with one of more valves that get actuated by the gravity or electronically actuated according to the orientation of the compressor in order to further expand the tiltability of the horizontal compressor substantially similar to or variation of the embodiment of
(83) In some embodiments, there are multiple pump assemblies inside a shell, where a pump assembly is either single or twin cylinder type. In some embodiments, each of the multiple pump assemblies is controlled by its own BLDC drive. In some embodiments, each BLDC drive is controlled by its controller or all of them by a common controller. In some embodiments, the multiple pumps can be arranged either pump assembly facing each other or away from each other. In some embodiments, multiple pumps can be completely separated by a pressure separator constituting multiple adjoined compressor configuration or multiple pumps within a single shell In some embodiments, the multiple compressors can be separated by a non-sealing separator, an oil dam, or pressure sealing separator.
(84) In some embodiments, a horizontal rotary compressor includes multiple pump assemblies inside the shell, where a pump assembly is either single or twin cylinder type. In some embodiments, each of the multiple pump assemblies is controlled by its own BLDC drive. In some embodiments, each BLDC drive is controlled by its controller or all of them by a common controller. In some embodiments, the multiple pumps can be arranged either pump assembly facing each other or away from each other. In some embodiments, the multiple pumps can be completely separated by a pressure separator constituting multiple adjoined compressor configuration or multiple pumps within a single shell In some embodiments, the multiple compressors can be separated by a non-sealing separator, an oil dam, or pressure sealing separator.
(85) In some embodiments, an oil lubricated roller-vane type rotary compressor (including rolling piston compressor, swing compressor, multi-vane compressor) includes an axis of rotation of the compressor pump and the motor is nominally horizontal. In some embodiments, the oil sump will form at the lower part within the shell due to gravity; where the lubricating oil from the sump flows into the moving parts of the compressor pump through the hollow core of the crank shaft which, in turn, is fed by a lubricant supply tube or passage whose one end is dipped into the oil sump. In some embodiments, the opposite end of the oil supply tube is attached to the flange nose or one of the flange disks or mid plate (in a twin cylinder model) housing an oil passage within to draw the oil from the sump and lead into the hollow core of the crankshaft. In some embodiments, the method of attachment or providing the internal passage would not distort the critical dimensional integrity of the flange or mid plate, such as flatness of the face of the flange or the mid plate, internal diameter of the flange bearing, etc. In some embodiments, the methods of attachment of the oil supply tube include the use of a tube with a slightly smaller diameter than the internal diameter of the flange bore can be inserted and glued without causing any dimensional changes or distortions, a cap with an attached tube may be glued to the flange, or the cap with an attached tube can be sealed with an O-ring and secured by a retaining spring, or in the cases of oil injection through an internal oil passage bored through the mid plate or one of the flanges, the oil flow passage can be pre-drilled before finish grinding operation.
(86) In some embodiments an oil supply tube attached to the flange nose may be a simple tube fixed in its orientation with respect to the axis of the pump assembly, or with a 2-D or 3-D rotatable joint actuated by the gravity.
(87) In some embodiments, a shell may be of a standard cylindrical shape or non-cylindrical with a bulge to store more oil and increase tiltability, where the bulge can be a circumferential bulge to better accommodate rotatable tube or a bulge in one location to accommodate a fixed oil supply tube.
(88) In some embodiments, an oil supply tube is attached to a pump assembly to one of the following locations using rolling piston as an example: a tube attached to the end of the flange nose at the pump side and enter directly into the hollow core of the shaft, a tube attached to either one of the flange disks feeding into the “oil manifold” formed at the interface of the flange face and the cylinder block, a tube attached to the mid-plate of a twin cylinder type pump assembly feeding into the “oil manifold” formed by the shaft, internal hollow space of the mid plate and the two cylinders in a twin cylinder pump.
(89) In some embodiments, a vapor compression system may utilizing any of the features herein to achieve high operational tiltability, low height in horizontal system, low front-to-back depth in a vertical vapor compression system, high turndown ratio with high part load efficiency, higher reliability, redundancy, higher capacity, higher reliability, and longer service life.