Series loop intermodal container
10670322 ยท 2020-06-02
Assignee
Inventors
- Renee A. Eddy (Manlius, NY, US)
- Jeffrey J. Burchill (Baldwinsville, NY, US)
- Giorgio Rusignuolo (Manlius, NY, US)
- Robert A. Chopko (Baldwinsville, NY, US)
- Larry D. Burns (Avon, IN, US)
- Ivan Rydkin (Rochester, NY, US)
- Ciara N. Poolman (Syracuse, NY, US)
- Paul Papas (West Hartford, CT, US)
- Parmesh Verma (South Windsor, CT, US)
Cpc classification
F25D11/003
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B65D88/745
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F25B2400/05
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B9/006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D19/003
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B9/008
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B23/006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B60H1/3232
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F25B2309/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2400/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F25D11/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B25/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B9/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D19/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B23/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B65D88/74
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A refrigerated transport system (20) comprises a body (22) enclosing a refrigerated compartment (69). A refrigeration system (30) comprises: a vapor compression loop (31) having a first heat exchanger (38) positioned to reject heat to an external environment in a cooling mode. A heat transfer loop (32) has a second heat exchanger (58) positioned to absorb heat from the refrigerated compartment in the cooling mode. An inter-loop heat exchanger (44) has a first leg (42) along the vapor compression loop and a second leg (43) along the heat transfer loop in heat exchange relation with the first leg.
Claims
1. A refrigerated transport system (20) comprising: a body (22) enclosing a refrigerated compartment (69) and comprising: a pair of side walls (22C, 22D); a top (22A); a bottom (22B); and one or more doors (28A, 28B); and a refrigeration system (30) comprising: a vapor compression loop (31) having a first heat exchanger (38) positioned to reject heat to an external environment in a cooling mode; a heat transfer loop (32) having a second heat exchanger (58) positioned to absorb heat from the refrigerated compartment in the cooling mode, wherein a heat transfer fluid of the heat transfer loop comprises at least 50% carbon dioxide, by weight; and an inter-loop heat exchanger (44) having a first leg (42) along the vapor compression loop and a second leg (43) along the heat transfer loop in heat exchange relation with the first leg.
2. The refrigerated transport system of claim 1, wherein: the vapor compression loop sequentially comprises: a compressor (36); said first heat exchanger; an expansion device (40); and said first leg; and the heat transfer loop sequentially comprises: a pump (56); said second heat exchanger; and said second leg.
3. The refrigerated transport system of claim 2, further comprising: an electric fan (60A, 60B) positioned to drive a recirculating air flow from the refrigerated compartment across the second heat exchanger.
4. The refrigerated transport system of claim 2, wherein: the first heat exchanger is a refrigerant-air heat exchanger.
5. The refrigerated transport system claim 1, wherein: the inter-loop heat exchanger is a brazed plate heat exchanger.
6. The refrigerated transport system of claim 1, further comprising: a carbon dioxide detector.
7. The refrigerated transport system of claim 6 further comprising: a ventilation fan (81A, 60A).
8. The refrigerated transport system of claim 1, wherein: a refrigerant charge of the vapor compression loop comprises at least 50% by weight propane.
9. The refrigerated transport system of claim 1, wherein: a refrigerant charge of the vapor compression loop comprises at least 90% by weight propane.
10. The refrigerated transport system of claim 1, being an intermodal shipping container, wherein: the one or more doors are at a first end (28A, 28B); and the refrigeration system is mounted in an equipment module (26) at a second end of the body opposite the first end.
11. The refrigerated transport system of claim 10, wherein: a wall (67) of the equipment module divides the external environment from the refrigerated compartment; the inter-loop heat exchanger is on the external environment side of the wall; and the second heat exchanger is on the refrigerated compartment side of the wall.
12. The refrigerated transport system of claim 11, wherein: the vapor compression loop sequentially comprises: a compressor (36); said first heat exchanger; an expansion device (40); and said first leg; the heat transfer loop sequentially comprises: a pump (56); said second heat exchanger; and said second leg; and the pump is on the refrigerated compartment side of the wall.
13. The refrigerated transport system of claim 10, further comprising: at least one flame arrestor across at least one opening of the equipment module.
14. The refrigerated transport system of claim 13, wherein: said at least one opening is along the front of the equipment module.
15. The refrigerated transport system of claim 13, wherein: the at least one flame arrestor comprises metallic wire mesh or perforated mesh.
16. A refrigerated transport system (20) comprising: a body (22) enclosing a refrigerated compartment (69) and comprising: a pair of side walls (22C, 22D); a top (22A); a bottom (22B); and one or more doors (28A, 28B); and a refrigeration system (30) comprising: a vapor compression loop (31) having a first heat exchanger (38) positioned to reject heat to an external environment in a cooling mode wherein a refrigerant charge of the vapor compression loop comprises at least 50% by weight propane; a heat transfer loop (32) having a second heat exchanger (58) positioned to absorb heat from the refrigerated compartment in the cooling mode; and an inter-loop heat exchanger (44) having a first leg (42) along the vapor compression loop and a second leg (43) along the heat transfer loop in heat exchange relation with the first leg.
17. The refrigerated transport system of claim 16, wherein: a refrigerant charge of the vapor compression loop comprises at least 90% by weight propane.
18. An intermodal shipping container (20) comprising: a body (22) enclosing a refrigerated compartment (69) and comprising: a pair of side walls (22C, 22D); a top (22A); a bottom (22B); and one or more doors (28A, 28B) at a first end of the body; an equipment module (26) at a second end of the body opposite the first end with at least one flame arrestor across at least one opening of the equipment module; and a refrigeration system (30) mounted in the equipment module and comprising: a vapor compression loop (31) having a first heat exchanger (38) positioned to reject heat to an external environment in a cooling mode; a heat transfer loop (32) having a second heat exchanger (58) positioned to absorb heat from the refrigerated compartment in the cooling mode; and an inter-loop heat exchanger (44) having a first leg (42) along the vapor compression loop and a second leg (43) along the heat transfer loop in heat exchange relation with the first leg.
19. The intermodal shipping container of claim 18, wherein: said at least one opening is along the front of the equipment module.
20. The intermodal shipping container of claim 18, wherein: the at least one flame arrestor comprises metallic wire mesh or perforated mesh.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6) Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7)
(8) The equipment module contains a refrigeration system 30 (
(9) Constructional and operational details of the refrigeration system may include some to all of those from the aforementioned US Patent Application Publication 2014/0260404 A1, International Publication Number WO 2015/057299 A1, and International Publication Number WO 2015/057297 A1.
(10) The illustrated vapor compression loop comprises sequentially along a refrigerant flowpath 34, a compressor 36, a heat rejection heat exchanger 38, an expansion device 40 (e.g., electronic expansion valve, thermal expansion valve, orifice, or the like), and a leg 42 of an inter-loop heat exchanger 44.
(11) One or more first fans 50 may drive an external air flow 520 across the heat rejection heat exchanger.
(12) The heat transfer loop comprises, sequentially along a flowpath 54, a pump 56, a heat absorption heat exchanger 58 and a leg 43 of the inter-loop heat exchanger 44 in heat exchange relation with the leg 42. An optional receiver 59 is between the leg 43 and pump 56.
(13) One or more second fans 60A, 60B (
(14) In various implementations, for powering the container, there may be a power cord (not shown) for connecting to an external power source. Additionally, the container may be associated with a generator 62 (
(15)
(16) For ease of manufacture or service, the equipment module (box) may be pre-formed as a module mateable to a remainder of the container body (e.g., insertable into an open front end of the body).
(17) The module 26 comprises a front panel 70 (
(18) A beneficial combination of working fluid for the two loops is propane for the vapor compression loop and carbon dioxide for the heat transfer loop. Both are low cost and non-toxic and propane is a highly efficient refrigerant. Under ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 34-2007, R-290 (propane) is rated A3 (non-toxic, highly flammable) and R744 is rated as A1 (non-toxic, non-flammable).
(19) In the two respective loops, the total refrigerant charge may consist essentially of said propane and said carbon dioxide, respectively, (e.g., allowing for industry standard levels of contaminants and additives such as corrosion inhibitors) or at least be 50% or at least 90% by weight said propane and said carbon dioxide.
(20) Various mitigation measures may be taken regarding the two loops. As noted above, propane-carrying components are isolated from the refrigerated compartment and seals around and in the equipment module prevent propane leakage into the refrigerated compartment. Thus, additional safety measures relating to actions once propane has entered the refrigerated compartment may be avoided (e.g., as distinguished from situations where a propane-containing evaporator is exposed to the refrigerated compartment). Mitigation measures may then be limited to external propane leakage and internal carbon dioxide leakage if at all.
(21) Exemplary propane leakage mitigation is passive and is discussed below.
(22) Exemplary carbon dioxide mitigation is active responsive to detecting of a refrigerant leak by a detector 232 (
(23) Although there may be various hardwired/hardcoded or analog implementations with little control logic, an exemplary implementation involves the detector 232 communicating with a programmed controller which in turn communicates with the active mitigation components. The controller may be the main controller 64 of the refrigeration system or may be a separate unit 234 (
(24) For carbon dioxide mitigation, the detector and controller may be coupled to a ventilation system for venting the interior of the container in response to leak detection. Some implementations may use baseline fresh air exchange vents (e.g., 80A shown above and, its associated blower fan, if any, and/or evaporator fan) to do the venting. For example, implementation might involve the opening of the gate valve 80A and the running of the fan 81A and/or 60A. This may be done regardless of whether the refrigeration system is running. For example, carbon dioxide leaks may occur even when the system is off but. In some implementations, the detection may cause a shutting down of the refrigeration system (e.g., the compressor and pump).
(25) As an alternative to the use of the gate valve 80A or other means associated with a baseline system, venting may be done by a dedicated additional venting fan (e.g., along with controllable shutter or other valving). In such a situation, the fan unit could include its own battery and electronics optionally integrated with one of the other components such as the controller 234 and/or the detector 232.
(26) Propane mitigation may include use of components to prevent or block sparking or arcing, including use of known forms of explosion-proof motors. Relevant motors for scrutiny include: the compressor motor; fan motors (particularly for the heat rejection heat exchanger); and actuator motors. This may include replacing or modifying baseline motors and adding motors associated with features such as supplemental vents, supplemental fans, and the like.
(27) Arcing would be undesirable in motor commutation. Induction motors would be good choices. Such a motor may have a totally enclosed frame and be sealed from any vapor penetration, this would include seals to shafts that would drive the fan. All connections to such motors may be sealed from any vapor penetration. This sealing would include the conduit via which wire enters the motor connection box
(28) Totally hermetic heaters would be used along the recirculating flowpaths (used for evaporator defrost and heating when external temperatures are so low that the compartment must be heated rather than cooled). Thus, any failure mode would not result in an electrical arc.
(29) Some-to-all electrical interconnections (wire, cable) potentially exposed to propane leaks may be sealed in exposition proof conduit. Penetrations between the exterior side and the evaporator side of the equipment module would be explosion proof (no vapor penetration). Some-to-all sensors along the exterior side may be sealed from vapor penetration so that any failure mode would not result in an electrical arc in a location of possible refrigerant exposure.
(30) As noted above, such propane mitigation may be avoided for electrical components and connections on the evaporator side such as: the evaporator fan motors; evaporator side heaters; and the DTS (defrost termination sensor) on the evaporator coil, HTT (high temperature termination sensor) on the evaporator coil, and temperature measurement sensor located slightly downstream of the evaporator.
(31) Additional propane mitigation involves the placement of flame arrestors in a number of exterior locations. Background flame arrestor technology which may be utilized is found International Publication No. WO2015/009721A1, published Jan. 22, 2015, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference as if set forth at length. One exemplary flame arrestor is one or more woven wire or perforated mesh (e.g., expanded metal mesh) panels 400 (
(32) The system may be made using otherwise conventional or yet-developed materials and techniques.
(33) The use of first, second, and the like in the description and following claims is for differentiation within the claim only and does not necessarily indicate relative or absolute importance or temporal order. Similarly, the identification in a claim of one element as first (or the like) does not preclude such first element from identifying an element that is referred to as second (or the like) in another claim or in the description.
(34) Where a measure is given in English units followed by a parenthetical containing SI or other units, the parenthetical's units are a conversion and should not imply a degree of precision not found in the English units.
(35) One or more embodiments have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made. For example, when applied to an existing basic refrigeration system and/or container construction and associated use methods, details of such existing configuration or its associated use may influence details of particular implementations. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.