Modular heat exchanger assembly for ultra-large radiator applications
10612855 ยท 2020-04-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F28F9/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D1/0443
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D1/0417
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F2009/004
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B29/0412
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/0236
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F28D1/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B29/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A modular heat exchanger assembly for ultra-large radiator applications. At least two heat exchanger cores are arranged in parallel flow, each core including inlet and outlet tanks sealingly attached to opposing headers at each end of a plurality of tubes. Each header is formed by securing mating header plates having mating openings. A plurality of O-rings are trapped within O-ring grooves formed by continuous depressions around each of the mating openings, and a portion of each tube is disposed within one of the O-rings and expanded outwardly to form a seal at each tube-to-header joint. A common tank is connected between tanks at adjacent ends of each heat exchanger core, and separate tanks are connected to the tank at the opposing ends of each core. The separate tanks may be inlet tanks and the common tank may be an outlet tank for fluid, or the flow path may be reversed.
Claims
1. A modular heat exchanger assembly, comprising: at least two heat exchangers arranged in parallel flow, each heat exchanger including a plurality of tubes, fins between the tubes, opposing headers sealingly attached at each end of the tubes, and inlet and outlet tanks sealingly attached to the opposing headers, each opposing header comprising first and second mating header plates secured together and having a plurality of mating openings therein and a plurality of O-rings trapped within O-ring grooves formed by continuous depressions around a circumference of each of the plurality of mating openings, a portion of each tube being disposed within one of the plurality of O-rings and said portion being expanded outwardly to form a seal at each tube-to-header joint without contacting either of the first or second header plate, whereby the second header plate is in direct contact with and secured to the first header plate at at least one point between adjacent O-rings such that the first header plate plurality of openings are aligned with the second header plate plurality of openings trapping each of the plurality of O-rings in the O-ring grooves; a common tank between the at least two heat exchangers, the common tank connected to one of the inlet tank or outlet tank, respectively, at one end of each heat exchanger; and separate tanks connected to the other of the inlet tank or outlet tank, respectively, at the other end of each of the at least two heat exchangers, whereby one of the common tank or the separate tanks is an outlet tank or tanks for fluid passing out of the modular heat exchanger assembly and the other of the common tank or the separate tanks is an inlet tank or tanks for fluid passing into the modular heat exchanger assembly.
2. The heat exchanger of claim 1 wherein the heat exchangers are sealingly connected to the common and separate tanks, respectively, using at least one hose attached between the tank on one end of each heat exchanger and the common tank, and the tank on the other end of each heat exchanger and one of the separate tanks, respectively.
3. The heat exchanger assembly of claim 1 wherein the common tank is centered between the at least two heat exchangers.
4. The heat exchanger assembly of claim 1 including a plurality of heat exchangers and wherein there are the same number of heat exchangers on each side of the common tank.
5. The heat exchanger assembly of claim 3 wherein the common tank and separate tanks are each comprised of steel and each of the heat exchangers comprises a CAB aluminum core wherein the tanks are comprised of plastic and the cores are comprised of aluminum tubes, fins and headers.
6. The heat exchanger assembly of claim 3 including a pair of opposing side members adapted to provide structural support to the heat exchangers and to at least partially eliminate air flow bypass around each side of the heat exchangers.
7. The heat exchanger assembly of claim 3 wherein the heat exchangers are arranged in pairs and further including a support member disposed between each pair of heat exchangers and shaped to force entering air to either side of the support member and direct air flow to the fins and tubes of the heat exchangers.
8. The heat exchanger assembly of claim 3 wherein each tube has a tube end sealingly inserted into one of a plurality of openings in the header to form a resilient tube-to-header joint.
9. A method of operating a modular heat exchanger assembly, comprising the steps of: providing at least two heat exchangers arranged in parallel flow, each heat exchanger including a plurality of tubes, fins between the tubes, opposing headers sealingly attached at each end of the tubes, and inlet and outlet tanks sealingly attached to the opposing headers, each opposing header comprising first and second mating header plates secured together and having a plurality of mating openings therein and a plurality of O-rings trapped within O-ring grooves formed by continuous depressions around a circumference of each of the plurality of mating openings, a portion of each tube being disposed within one of the plurality of O-rings and said portion being expanded outwardly to form a seal at each tube-to-header joint without contacting either of the first or second header plate, whereby the second header plate is in direct contact with and secured to the first header plate at at least one point between adjacent O-rings such that the first header plate plurality of openings are aligned with the second header plate plurality of openings trapping each of the plurality of O-rings in the O-ring grooves; providing a common tank between the at least two heat exchangers, the common tank connected to one of the inlet tank or outlet tank, respectively, at one end of each heat exchanger; providing separate tanks connected to the other of the inlet tank or outlet tank, respectively, at the other end of each of the at least two heat exchangers; providing fluid ports on each of the common tank and the separate tanks for passage of a fluid into and out of the heat exchanger assembly, whereby one of the common tank or the separate tanks is an outlet tank or tanks for fluid passing out of the heat exchanger assembly and the other of the common tank or the separate tanks is an inlet tank or tanks for fluid passing into the heat exchanger assembly; and flowing the fluid between the common tank and the separate tanks through the at least two heat exchangers to cool the fluid.
10. The method of claim 9 further comprising the step of: sealingly connecting each heat exchanger to the common and separate tanks, respectively, using at least one hose attached between the inlet or outlet tank, respectively, on one end of each heat exchanger and the common tank, and the other of the inlet or outlet tank, respectively, on the other end of each heat exchanger and one of the separate tanks.
11. The method of claim 9 wherein each of the separate tanks includes an inlet fluid port of the fluid ports and the common tank includes an outlet fluid port of the fluid ports, and wherein the step of flowing the fluid between the common tank and the separate tanks comprises first flowing the fluid through the separate tank inlet fluid ports, through the at least two heat exchangers in parallel, and then through the common tank outlet fluid port.
12. The method of claim 9 further comprising the step of: connecting an inlet fluid line to an inlet fluid port of the fluid ports on one of the common tank and the separate tanks, and connecting an outlet fluid line to an outlet fluid port of the fluid ports on the other of the common tank and the separate tanks.
13. A modular heat exchanger assembly, comprising: at least two heat exchangers arranged in parallel flow, each heat exchanger including a plurality of tubes, fins between the tubes, opposing headers sealingly attached at each end of the tubes, and inlet and outlet tanks sealingly attached to the opposing headers, each opposing header comprising first and second mating header plates secured together and having a plurality of mating openings therein and a plurality of O-rings trapped within O-ring grooves formed by continuous depressions around a circumference of each of the plurality of mating openings, said O-ring grooves disposed between said first and second mating header plates and spaced along a length of said opposing header, a portion of each tube being disposed within one of the plurality of O-rings and said portion being expanded outwardly to form a seal at each tube-to-header joint without contacting either of the first or second header plate, whereby the second header plate is in direct contact with and secured to the first header plate at at least one point between adjacent O-rings such that the first header plate plurality of openings are aligned with the second header plate plurality of openings trapping each of the plurality of O-rings in the O-ring grooves; a common tank between the at least two heat exchangers, the common tank connected to one of the inlet tank or outlet tank, respectively, at one end of each heat exchanger; and separate tanks connected to the other of the inlet tank or outlet tank, respectively, at the other end of each of the at least two heat exchangers, whereby one of the common tank or the separate tanks is an outlet tank or tanks for fluid passing out of the modular heat exchanger assembly and the other of the common tank or the separate tanks is an inlet tank or tanks for fluid passing into the modular heat exchanger assembly.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The features of the invention believed to be novel and the elements characteristic of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The figures are for illustration purposes only and are not drawn to scale. The invention itself, however, both as to organization and method of operation, may best be understood by reference to the detailed description which follows taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
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DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENT(S)
(9) In describing the embodiments of the present invention, reference will be made herein to
(10) The present invention is directed to a unique assembly of radiator cores which cut the length of the coolant flow path by half by having the coolant enter the radiator through two side inlet tanks and flow horizontally through two (or more) radiator cores in parallel to a center outlet tank. With the pressure drop thus reduced, the radiator cores may now be made with fewer rows of tubes deep, thereby making the cores thinner and less expensive.
(11) Certain terminology is used herein for convenience only and is not to be taken as a limitation of the invention. For example, words such as upper, lower, left, right, horizontal, vertical, upward, and downward merely describe the configuration shown in the drawings. For purposes of clarity, the same reference numbers may be used in the drawings to identify similar elements.
(12) Referring now to
(13) Each heat exchanger header 16A, 16B, 16C, 16D may be sealingly connected with a gasket to the filler frame 12 or the tank 71 in accordance with known methods such as bolting.
(14) The modular heat exchanger assembly of the prior art further includes upper radiator or coolant tanks 71A, 71C sealingly connected to the top header 16A of cores 10A, 10C, respectively, and lower radiator or coolant tanks 71B, 71D sealingly connected to the bottom header 16B of cores 10B, 10D, respectively. The tanks 71 each have an inlet/outlet 81 for connection to an internal combustion engine or other external system. Tanks 71 may be made of any suitable material, such as steel. Structural side members 40 are provided and are disposed adjacent heat exchanger cores along the left and right side of the modular heat exchanger and are used to protect and support the core sides and to substantially eliminate air flow bypass around the sides of the cores. An elongated core support member 50 performs a similar task as the structural side members 40 and extends between upper and lower headers of the cores.
(15) Typically, coolant enters the top inlet tanks 71A, 71C and flows down through the two upper radiator cores 10A, 10C in parallel, through the filler frame or connector member 12A, 12B, and finally through the two lower radiator cores 10B, 10D in parallel to the outlet tanks 71B, 71D. The upper and lower radiator cores form a series flow path, that is, coolant flows first through the upper cores and then through the lower cores, with attendant pressure drops. The coolant flow rate needed to cool such large engines is so high that typically the radiators are made many more rows of tubes deep than are needed for cooling, just to be able to pass the high coolant flows without excessive pressure drop.
(16) U.S. Pat. No. 8,631,859, entitled Modular Heat Exchanger, shows in
(17) Referring now to
(18) The modular heat exchanger shown in
(19) The modular heat exchanger assembly of the present invention includes separate radiator or coolant tanks 710A, 710C on either side of the assembly sealingly connected to the first headers 160A of cores 100A, 100B, 100C, 100D, respectively, and a common tank 710B disposed between and sealingly connected to the second headers 160B of cores 100A, 100B, 100C, 100D, respectively. Common tank 710B may be centered between one or more pairs of horizontally adjacent cores, as shown in
(20) Inlet/outlet fluid ports 810 are provided on each of the common tank 710B and the separate tanks 710A, 710C for passage of fluid into and out of the heat exchanger. In an embodiment, the separate tanks may be inlet tanks for fluid passing into the heat exchanger assembly and the common tank may be an outlet tank for fluid passing out of the heat exchanger assembly, or the flow path may be reversed, with the common tank being an inlet tank and the separate tanks being outlet tanks. In operation, fluid enters the assembly through inlet ports in either the common tank or separate tanks, and the fluid flows between the common tank and the separate tanks, respectively, through the at least two heat exchanger cores to cool the fluid. By cutting the length of the coolant flow path in half over that of the conventional prior art modular assembly, the coolant pressure drop is reduced, allowing the radiator cores to be made thinner, with fewer rows of tubes deep, for the same coolant pressure drop. In certain embodiments, the radiator cores may be as few as a single row of tubes deep depending on design requirements.
(21) As shown in
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(23) As shown in
(24) The modular assembly of the present invention may be applied to any type of radiator core construction, including the conventional large, multi-cored copper/brass core assembly construction, as shown in
(25) Automobile and light truck, and some heavy truck, radiators have long since abandoned costly copper/brass radiator construction in favor of CAB (controlled atmosphere brazing) aluminum core construction with plastic tanks. PTA (plastic tank aluminum) radiators have tabbed aluminum headers which are crimped to a plastic radiator tank with an elastomeric gasket between. This type of construction is more automated, requires far less labor, is more consistent, uses less costly material, and results in a product which is lighter, stronger and which has demonstrated improved durability compared to soldered copper/brass. However, the available CAB furnaces limit core size to not larger than about 48 inches square.
(26) Referring now to
(27) In a typical PTA core construction, the core tubes and fins are made of aluminum or an aluminum alloy, and may be clad or coated with braze material, but other metals and alloys may also be used. The tubes are inserted into, and sealed to, openings in the walls of an aluminum inlet header and outlet header, respectively, to make up the core. The headers are connected to, or part of, plastic inlet and outlet tanks or manifolds and structural side pieces connect the tanks to complete the heat exchanger. Each of the tubes has a tube end secured in an opening in the header wall to form a tube-to-header joint. Oval tubes are typically utilized for close tube spacing for optimum heat transfer performance of the heat exchanger, although other tube shapes and cross-sections may be utilized. The tube-to-header joint is typically brazed to prevent leakage around the tubes and header.
(28) Rigid tube-to-header joints pose several problems in the field of ultra-large heat exchangers, for example, while stationary generator sets are not subject to transportation shock and vibration, earth movers and locomotives certainly are. This transportation shock and/or vibration can lead to failure at the tube-to-header joint, destroying the radiator core. Moreover, the cooling systems of some locomotives consist of multiple large radiators which are connected into the system by valving on an on demand basis. As a result, when running in cold weather on level grade, only two of up to six available radiators might be connected. Then, when climbing a grade, one or more of the other radiators would be connected in order to handle the cooling load. The result is that some radiators would be lying idle at winter ambient temperatures well below freezing when, suddenly, they would be shocked with hot coolant around 190 degrees Fahrenheit. Such a thermal shock would destroy the average radiator core; therefore, resilient tube-to-header joints to absorb the expansion/contraction of the core tubes are essential.
(29) The modular heat exchanger assembly of the present invention remedies these deficiencies by, in at least one embodiment, utilizing a resilient O-ring seal which does not require brazing at the tube-to-header joint and allows for relative motion between the tube and header without the build-up of high stresses.
(30) The modular heat exchanger assembly according to the present invention is applicable to many types of ultra-large air-cooled heat exchangers, such as radiators, charge air coolers and air cooled oil coolers, for use in vehicles or industry. The assembly may include any number of heat exchanger cores arranged in parallel flow. The cores shown in
(31) Thus the present invention achieves one or more of the following advantages. The present invention provides an improved modular heat exchanger assembly which reduces the coolant flow path length by half, thereby reducing coolant pressure drop and allowing the radiator cores to be made thinner, with fewer rows of tubes deep, for the same coolant pressure drop. The assembly is applicable to all types of heat exchanger core construction, and can provide significant cost reductions over conventional practice by utilizing automotive-type PTA core radiators connected in parallel to inlet side tanks and a center outlet tank by means of hoses. The assembly may include resilient tube-to-header joints which will provide protection against thermal shock in some locomotive and other radiator applications, at a greatly reduced cost. The assembly can also be applied to various ultra-large heat exchangers, such as radiators, charge air coolers and air cooled oil coolers.
(32) While the present invention has been particularly described, in conjunction with specific embodiments, it is evident that many alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the foregoing description. It is therefore contemplated that the appended claims will embrace any such alternatives, modifications and variations as falling within the true scope and spirit of the present invention.