JET PUMP APPARATUS AND METHODS FOR STANDING COLUMN WELL SYSTEMS AND DEPLOYMENT THEREOF

20200284475 ยท 2020-09-10

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

The present invention discloses groundwater heat transfer system comprising a primary pump suspended in a well and connected to at least one water supply pipe, a heat exchange system being connected to said primary pump via a secondary pump, a return pipe being connected to the heat exchange system and returning water from the heat exchange system to the well, wherein the primary pump provides motive pressure to a primary nozzle of a liquid jet ejector submerged in the well, which entrains filtered groundwater through a secondary nozzle of the liquid jet ejector, wherein the secondary pump, placed after the primary pump and before the heat exchange system, provides the remaining system head.

Claims

1. A groundwater heat transfer system comprising: a primary pump, said primary pump is suspended in a well and connected to at least one water supply pipe, said at least one water supply pipe extending downhole substantially to the bottom of said well, a heat exchange system, said heat exchange system being connected to said primary pump via a secondary pump, a return pipe, said return pipe being connected to said heat exchange system and returning water from said heat exchange system to said well, wherein the primary pump provides motive pressure to a primary nozzle of a liquid jet ejector submerged in the well, which entrains filtered groundwater through a secondary nozzle of the liquid jet ejector, and wherein the secondary pump, placed after the primary pump and before the heat exchange system, provides the remaining system head.

2. The groundwater heat transfer system according to claim 1, wherein a check valve is placed in proximity of the secondary nozzle of the liquid jet ejector to prevent loss of prime when the pump is idle.

3. The groundwater heat transfer system according to claim 1, wherein a strainer is placed before the heat exchange system to remove impurities.

4. The groundwater heat transfer system according to claim 1, wherein the groundwater is pumped to the surface only at atmospheric pressure via the at least one water supply pipe.

5. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 1, wherein said primary pump is suspended above ground level.

6. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 1, wherein said well is a standing column well.

7. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 1, wherein the primary pump is a jet pump.

8. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 7, wherein there are multiple standing column wells in parallel.A groundwater heat transfer system comprising: a primary pump, said primary pump is suspended in a well and connected to at least one water supply pipe, said at least one water supply pipe extending downhole substantially to the bottom of said well, a heat exchange system, said heat exchange system being connected to said primary pump via a secondary pump, a return pipe, said return pipe being connected to said heat exchange system and returning water from said heat exchange system to said well, and a strainer is positioned upstream the heat exchange system; wherein the primary pump provides motive pressure to a primary nozzle of a liquid jet ejector submerged in the well, which entrains filtered groundwater through a secondary nozzle of the liquid jet ejector, wherein the secondary pump, placed after the primary pump and before the heat exchange system, provides the remaining system head; and wherein the groundwater is pumped to the surface at atmospheric pressure via the at least one water supply pipe.

10. The groundwater heat transfer system according to claim 9, wherein a check valve is placed in proximity of the secondary nozzle of the liquid jet ejector to prevent loss of prime when the pump is idle.

11. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 9, wherein said primary pump is suspended above ground level.

12. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 9, wherein said well is a standing column well.

13. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 9, wherein the primary pump is a jet pump.

14. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 13, wherein there are multiple standing column wells in parallel.A groundwater heat transfer system comprising: a jet pump, said jet pump is suspended in a standing well and connected to at least one water supply pipe, said at least one water supply pipe extending downhole substantially to the bottom of said standing well, a heat exchange system, said heat exchange system being connected to said jet pump via a secondary pump, a return pipe, said return pipe being connected to said heat exchange system and returning water from said heat exchange system to said standing well, wherein the jet pump provides motive pressure to a primary nozzle of a liquid jet ejector submerged in the standing well, which entrains filtered groundwater through a secondary nozzle of the liquid jet ejector, and wherein the secondary pump, placed after the jet pump and before the heat exchange system, provides the remaining system head.

16. The groundwater heat transfer system according to claim 15, wherein a check valve is placed in proximity of the secondary nozzle of the liquid jet ejector.

17. The groundwater heat transfer system according to claim 15, wherein a strainer is placed before the heat exchange system to remove impurities.

18. The groundwater heat transfer system according to claim 15, wherein the groundwater is pumped to the surface only at atmospheric pressure via the at least one water supply pipe.

19. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 15, wherein said jet pump is suspended above ground level.

20. The ground water heat transfer system according to claim 15, wherein there are multiple standing column wells in parallel.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0029] By way of example only, preferred embodiments of the present invention are described hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:

[0030] FIG. 1 is a flow diagram showing a conventional standing column well design with riser pipe;

[0031] FIG. 2 is a flow diagram showing a conventional standing column well design without riser pipe,

[0032] FIG. 3 is a flow diagram showing a conventional jet pump system,

[0033] FIG. 4 is a flow diagram showing an embodiment according to the present invention, and

[0034] FIG. 5 is a flow diagram showing an embodiment according to the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

[0035] It is to be understood that the disclosure is not limited in its application to the details of the embodiments as set forth in the following description. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways.

[0036] Furthermore, it is to be understood that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. Contrary to the use of the term consisting, the use of the terms including, containing, comprising, or having and variations thereof is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items. The use of the term a or an is meant to encompass one or more. Any numerical range recited herein is intended to include all values from the lower value to the upper value of that range.

[0037] As shown in FIG. 1, the most common commercial design for SCW systems, a standing column well 10 is enclosed with a well casing 20 and a well cap 30. Groundwater is pumped from well 10 with a submersible pump 40 installed within a riser pipe 50 screened or slotted at its base, via a supply pipe 60 and passed through a strainer 70 then to a heat exchanger 80 before finally being returned to the standing column well 10 via a return pipe 100.

[0038] Sometimes to simplify the installation, the riser pipe may be omitted.

[0039] As shown in FIG. 2, a standing column well 10 is enclosed with a well casing 20 and a well cap 30. Groundwater is pumped from well 10 with a submersible pump 40, via a supply pipe 60 and passed through a strainer 70 then to a heat exchanger 80 before finally being returned to the standing column well 10 via a return pipe 100.

[0040] FIG. 3 illustrates a conventional jet pump where groundwater is delivered to the pressure tank at the required gauge pressure.

[0041] As shown in FIG. 3, a standing column well 10 is enclosed with a well casing 20 and a well cap 30. Groundwater is pumped from well 10 with through a filter 110 and check valve 120 and a liquid jet ejector 130 of a jet pump, via a supply pipe 60 to a primary pump 140 before being delivered to a pressure tank.

[0042] To the inventors' knowledge, commercial jet pump systems have not been used for commercial groundwater heat pump applications.

[0043] The present invention allows standing column wells to extend their application for new constructions where the borehole heat exchanger field is located, for example underneath the building.

[0044] FIG. 4 illustrates an embodiment of the invention that provides a novel design configuration of a jet pump system for standing column well applications.

[0045] As shown in FIG. 4, a standing column well 10 is enclosed with a well casing 20 and a well cap 30. A primary (centrifugal) pump 140 is used to provide the motive pressure to a primary nozzle of the submerged liquid jet ejector 130, which entrains filtered groundwater (via filter 110) through a secondary nozzle. A check valve 120 placed near the secondary nozzle of the liquid jet ejector 130 prevents loss of prime when the pump is idle. To minimize the required motive pump pressure, the groundwater is pumped to the surface only at atmospheric pressure via a supply pipe 60. Doing so increases the primary flow while maintaining the motive pressure, thereby increasing the pump efficiency.

[0046] A secondary pump 150 is then used to provide the remaining system head. After passing through a strainer 70 and a plate heat exchanger 80, the groundwater is reinjected at the bottom of the standing column well 10 through a return pipe 90.

[0047] Referring to FIG. 5, for a submerged ejector installed inside a standing column well, let P1 and Q1 be the fluid pressure and flow, respectively, at the primary nozzle, let P2 and Q2 be fluid pressure and flow, respectively, at the secondary nozzle of a submerged ejector, and let P3 and Q3 be the pressure and flow at the discharge.

[0048] Considering a groundwater heat pump system of 105 kW of heating capacity that requires a flow of 20 m.sup.3/hr (Q2) and a water jet ejector positioned under a height of water column equivalent to 1 barg (P2). The required conditions at the primary nozzle are the following:

P1: 5 bar

[0049] Q1: 20 m.sup.3/hr

[0050] The discharge conditions are the following:

P3: 2 barg
Q3: 40 m.sup.3/hr

[0051] In this case, the pressure recovery is 1 barg. Considering a required suction head of 1 barg, the primary pump needs to provide a discharge pressure (PD) of


PD=P1P2suction head


PD=5 barg1 barg1 barg=3 barg

[0052] The pressure at the pump suction pressure (PS) is therefore:


PS=P3P2suction head


PS=2 barg1 barg1 barg=0 barg

[0053] For a primary pump with an overall efficiency of 60% (eff), the required primary pump power is calculated as following:

[00001] .Math. W = Q1 * ( P .Math. D - P .Math. S ) * 100 .Math. kW * s m 3 * barg * 1 eff W = 2 .Math. 0 .Math. m 3 3600 .Math. .Math. s * ( 3 .Math. .Math. barg - 0 .Math. .Math. barg ) * 100 .Math. kW * s m 3 * barg * 1 0 . 6 = 2.8 .Math. .Math. kW

[0054] Therefore, the pumping efficacy is optimized.

[0055] This system is not limited to a single standing column well and can be extended to multiple wells in parallel.

[0056] The pumping efficiency is optimized by selecting the ejector geometry and location for maximum pressure recovery for the specified operating conditions. Moreover, different configurations of ejector, including parallel, or in series, may be engaged.

[0057] The jet pump systems as disclosed in the present invention is therefore a viable alternative to submersible pumps for standing column well systems applications. Even a temporary loss of prime would not prevent the system from running, as water (for priming) is generally available and supplied by the municipal water system.

[0058] Groundwater loop systems have had bad reputations in the past due to groundwater related problems. Unsurprisingly, one of the critical issues in the design of any system handling groundwater is to configure it in a way to eliminate or minimize problems arising from groundwater.

[0059] The jet pump systems as disclosed in the present invention can be used to significantly lessen groundwater pumping related problems for standing column well applications.

[0060] Moreover, the present invention provides a practical solution to utilize standing column well systems when there is a limited accessibility to the well due to the lack of space or location.

[0061] While the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred and/or exemplary embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the present invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, the scope of the appended claims should not be limited by the preferred embodiments set forth in the examples, but should be given the broadest interpretation consistent with the description as a whole.