Water systems
10900669 ยท 2021-01-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16K11/0856
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H15/184
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24D2220/0264
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H15/215
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L9/19
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K11/0876
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24D2220/0207
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10T137/87161
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
F24H15/305
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H15/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10T137/85954
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
F24D17/0084
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E03B7/045
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F24H15/238
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L9/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F24D17/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K11/087
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L9/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L9/19
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24D19/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K11/085
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A circulating hot water system has a hot water flow circuit defined by pipework leading out from and back to an in-line heater, and including a pump to drive circulation of the hot water. Each of multiple user points has an outflow branch conduit and a return flow branch conduit with a common wall for heat exchange, as does the main flow circuit: the outflow conduit surrounds the return conduit. Water is fed into the system from a pressurized cold water supply main through a check valve. Sensors are used to monitor water temperatures and flow conditions around the system. A programmed control processor can control heating and pumping rates in various regimes, e.g. to maintain system temperature above a predetermined threshold. An isolation valve adapted for concentric double pipes is also described.
Claims
1. An isolation valve for a fluid flow system having concentric conduits, the valve comprising: a movable closure element; and a fixed structure, the movable closure element comprising an outer tube with an external spherical surface portion and an inward surface defining an outer conduit, and also comprising an inner tube that is coaxial with the outer tube and supported inside the outer tube by a support structure comprised of plural circumferentially-spaced struts, fins or axially-extending walls, thereby defining an inner conduit, and the fixed structure comprised of first and second sealing portions to seal against and around respective oppositely-directed ends of the moveable closure element, wherein an inner conduit flow segment of the valve is defined in the inner tube of the moveable closure element, wherein an outer conduit flow segment of the valve is defined between the inner tube and the inward surface of the outer tube, wherein the fixed structure further comprises a valve housing, inner tubular union portions for inner pipes of said concentric conduits of the fluid flow system, and outer tubular union portions for outer pipes of said concentric conduits of the fluid flow system, and wherein the valve housing carries an external operating member whereby the moveable closure element can be turned between open and closed positions, the open position being a position in which the inner and outer conduit flow segments of the movable closure element register respectively with the inner and outer pipes of the concentric conduits for flow through the valve, and the closed position being a position in which an external surface portion of the movable closure element engages a said sealing portion, at least at one side of the valve, to close off flow through the valve in the outer conduit, and at said at least one side of the valve, the movable closure element has a side surface having a relatively recessed portion which in the closed position is recessed away from the inner tubular union portion, providing flow communication between the inner and outer conduits.
2. A circulating water system with a water flow circuit defined by pipework leading out from and back to a pump to drive circulation of the water, the water flow circuit comprising a conduit having concentric inner and outer pipes, wherein an isolation valve of claim 1 is coupled into said conduit.
3. An isolation valve for a water system to be coupled into a conduit having concentric inner and outer pipes, the valve comprising: a movable closure element; a fixed structure; the movable closure element comprising an outer tube and an inner tube coaxial with the outer tube and supported inside it by a support structure, an inner conduit flow segment of the valve being defined in the inner tube and an outer conduit flow segment of the valve being defined between the inner tube and an inward surface of the outer tube, and the fixed structure comprising a valve housing, first and second sealing portions to seal against and around respective oppositely-directed ends of the moveable closure element, inner tubular union portions for the inner pipes of the adjacent lengths of the conduit, and outer tubular union portions for the outer pipes of the adjacent lengths of the conduit; and an external operating member carried by the valve housing whereby the moveable closure element can be turned between open and closed positions, the open position being a position in which in use the inner and outer conduit flow segments of the movable closure element register respectively with the inner and outer pipes of the conduit for flow through the valve, the closed position being a position in which an external spherical surface portion of the movable closure element engages a said sealing portion to close off flow through the valve at the outer conduit, at least one side of the valve, and a side surface of the movable closure element at said side of the valve having a relatively recessed portion which in the closed position is recessed away from the inner tubular union portion at that side, to provide flow communication between the inner and outer conduits on that side of the closed valve.
4. The isolation valve of claim 3, wherein said support structure is plural circumferentially-spaced struts, fins or axially-extending walls.
5. The isolation valve of claim 3, wherein the movable closure element is a ball element.
6. The isolation valve of claim 5, wherein said inward surface of the outer tube is a cylindrical surface.
7. The isolation valve of claim 3, said valve being a quarter-turn valve.
8. A circulating water system with a water flow circuit defined by pipework leading out from and back to a pump to drive circulation of the water, the water flow circuit comprising a conduit having concentric inner and outer pipes, wherein an isolation valve of claim 3 is coupled into said conduit.
9. The circulating water system of claim 8, wherein the inner tubular union portions of the valve slide into or around the inner pipes of the adjacent lengths of the conduit, and the outer tubular union portions slide into or around the outer pipes thereof.
10. The circulating water system of claim 8, said water system being a hot water system comprising a heater acting on said flow circuit to heat water flowing therein.
11. The circulating water system of claim 10, wherein the flow circuit is branched to serve multiple floors of a building, and respective ones of said isolator valves are positioned in the system to enable isolation of the branches from the rest of the system.
12. The isolation valve of claim 3, wherein at a second side of the valve, the movable closure element has a second side surface with a second relatively recessed portion.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(1) Examples of the invention are now described, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(14) Referring firstly to
(15) The main elements of the circulation system 1 are an outflow pipe 11 for outward flow of heated water from a heater 20 (or multiple heaters, if needed for higher power output), along an outflow channel 21, and a return pipe 12 of substantially smaller diameter extending concentrically along inside the outflow pipe 11 and defining a central return channel 22. Preferably these pipes are of copper or stainless steel. They are of generally circular cross-section, and the return pipe 12 is mounted concentrically inside the outflow pipe 11 by means of suitable support structures, not shown, examples of which are described later. An insulative jacket or lagging is provided around the hot water circulation system 1 to reduce losses; again this is not shown.
(16) At the most distant point from the heater 20, the inner return pipe 12 finishes short of a terminus of the outer pipe 11 so that the two communicate via a main return opening 23. This terminus may be a blank terminus or may have an outlet or other user point. A series of outlet user points 4 such as taps is provided on respective pipe branches 14 from the main circulation system 1. At each branch point 13 both the inner return conduit 12 and the outer flow conduit 11 have a branch or T-piece, and the branch 14 to the outlet 4 then has an outer branch outflow conduit 141 and an inner concentric branch return conduit 142. The inner return portion 142 terminates short of the outlet 4, providing a branch return opening 143 where the flows of the inner and outer tubes and the outlet all communicate without dead space.
(17) Near the heater 20, the return pipe 12 emerges through an elbow of the outer pipe 11. The exposed return pipe there has an electrically-driven pump 8 for driving the circulating flow, a control valve 3 and a return temperature sensor 9 before re-entering the heater 20.
(18) The heater is a continuous or in-line type instant heater which heats the water flow conduit directly before it emerges as the outflow conduit 11. For example, a gas-fuelled condensing (exhaust pre-heating) heater with adjustable and switchable output is suitable.
(19) A sentinel temperature sensor 5 detects the circulating water temperature at the turnaround point 23 between the outflow and return conduits at the most distant point 40 of the circulatory system, and feeds this information to the control processor 7 (e.g. a programmable logic controller) via a transducer 6. The temperature sensed by the return sensor 9 shortly before the return flow re-enters the heater 20 is also fed to the control processor 7. The control processor 7 is connected and programmed to control the adjustable output of the heater 20, and also to control the pump 8 by turning it on or off and/or by modulating its pumping rate. A pump with variable rate, controllable e.g. via a built-in VSD (inverter) is suitable.
(20) An external cold water supply conduit 100, in this case a pressurised mains water supply, enters the return pipe 12 at a junction 15 shortly before it re-enters the heater 20. A check valve 110 permitting only forward flow is provided in the supply conduit 100, and a flow sensor 111 immediately downstream of this detects when there is flow from the supply 100 into the circulation system. The flow sensor 111 is connected to the control processor 7.
(21) In the stasis mode shown, all of the outlets 4 (taps etc.) are closed and the control processor 7 is programmed to maintain the temperatures (as assessed at the sentinel sensor 5, the return sensor 9 or other strategically located sensor) within predetermined acceptable ranges, such as a minimum of 50 C. and a maximum of 60 C. For a pasteurisation mode, the temperature may be controlled at 70 C. or above. The processor 7 controls the heater output and/or pump rate with appropriate feedback to maintain the temperature accordingly. The system is full of water at full pressure, so no water enters through the external supply conduit 100 from the mains, the check valve 110 remaining closed and the flow sensor 111 detecting no flow.
(22) In the stasis mode heated water flows in a generally laminar flow out along the annular cross-section outflow channel 21. This includes flowing out along the outflow tube of each branch 14, and back along the return conduit 12 with flow along the subsidiary return branch conduit portions 142 of each of the branches 14, since flow pressure differences prevail at each of the branches as they do at the terminal point 40. Because the return pipe is surrounded or jacketed by the outflow pipe, heat losses are reduced and may be further reduced by appropriate lagging or other insulation of the pipe system including its branches. Laminar flow in the stasis mode reduces vibration, other noise and wear in the pipes. It can be provided by programming to adjust the pump rate down (adjusting the heating rate up if necessary) to below a predetermined flow rate limit, when the desired temperature is achieved for the stasis mode. In dynamic mode the flow rate may be higher according to demand.
(23) Each outlet 4 is provided with an appropriate mixer tap, such as an automatic (thermostatic) mixing device to prevent inadvertent scalding by mixing with cold water from the cold water supply (which is not shown, and may be a conventional supply direct from a pressurised main).
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(25) The system controller (in this example and in general) may be programmed to provide a limited use reservation, whereby when an outlet is opened the system remains in the stasis mode unless and until water use exceeds a preset threshold parameter of flow rate, time and/or volume e.g. as detected using the flow sensor. This can avoid unnecessary powering-up of the heater and/or interruption of the pump in the event of minimal uses. Such a system desirably uses a positively actuated (rather than passive, flow/pressure-actuated) shut-off valve 3 to control its operation in tandem with the pump 8.
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(27) An additional feature in the second embodiment is a heat source thermostat 208 detecting the water temperature in the heater 20, and connected to the control processor 7. [In this embodiment the sensors are matched to appropriate input transducers comprised in the control processor 7 so no separate transducer is shown.] The temperature sensor 208 (thermostat) in the heater 20 takes the place (functionally speaking) of the return temperature sensor 9 of the first embodiment. Immediately downstream of the pump 8 a passive mechanical check valve 30 is provided (instead of the positively controlled shut-off valve 3 of the first embodiment).
(28) In the stasis mode of
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(33) The isolator valve 250 is a quarter-turn ball valve consisting essentially of a body or housing 270 and a rotatable closure member 260. The body 270 consists of a main body portion 271 and a retainer body portion 272. Each body portion 271, 272 comprises a tubular outer union 273 sized to receive slidingly an end of a respective outer pipe 11, with an external thread for the sealed securing of the outer pipe. The main body portion 271 defines an interior cavity for the ball 261 of the closure member 260, and the bonnet 274 of the valve which includes a packing seal 275 and retaining nut 276 for the actuating spindle 262 of the closure member 260. Actuation may be manual, or automated e.g. by any conventional drive. The body retainer portion 272 screws into the main body portion 271 to enclose the valve mechanism and hold the components in place. An opposed pair of seat union components 280 are retained in this cavity, held between the body portions by external flanges 285, and these provide both peripheral seals (seats) 281 for sealing around the ball 261 and central inner union tubes 282 for sliding connection with the inner (return) pipes 12 of the circulation system. The seat union components 280 have outer tubular extensions 284 fitting into the outer union tubes 273 of the body portions whose internal diameter matches that of the outer pipes, and the end surfaces of these extensions provide stop abutments for the outer pipes. The inner union tubes 282 are mounted concentrically in the seat union components 280 by support members 286 (see
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