HEAT STATION FOR COOLING A CIRCULATING CRYOGEN
20190309994 ยท 2019-10-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F25B2309/001
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D2021/0033
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2270/908
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B9/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F3/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F25B9/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B9/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A heat station for a GM or Stirling cycle expander provides a versatile, efficient, and cost effective means of transferring heat from a remote load at cryogenic temperatures that is cooled by a circulating cryogen to the gas in a GM or Stirling cycle expander as it flows between a regenerator and a displaced volume. The heat exchanger comprises a shell that has external and internal fins thermally connected to it that are aligned parallel to the axis of the shell and enclosed in a housing having an inlet port and an outlet port on the bottom of the housing.
Claims
1. A cryogenic expander operating on the GM or Stirling cycle cooling a circulating cryogen comprising; a cylinder having a mounting flange at the warm end, a displacer, in said cylinder, reciprocating between a warm end and a cold end, the motion creating a cold displaced volume, a regenerator through which a first gas flows in and out of the cold displaced volume, a first heat exchanger between the regenerator and the displaced volume that transfers heat radially through a cylindrical shell from a second circulating gas in a second heat exchanger, external to said shell, to the first gas, said second heat exchanger enclosed in a housing having inlet and outlet ports for said second gas, said housing having a top plenum space above, and a bottom plenum space below said second heat exchanger, and said inlet and outlet ports, which direct all of said second circulating gas to flow through said second heat exchanger, are on the bottom of the housing.
2. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 1, in which said ports are arranged such that a condensable gas returns through the inlet port and a liquid leaves through the outlet port.
3. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 2, in which the expander can be oriented between cold end down and horizontal.
4. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 2, in which a liquid pump circulates the circulating cryogen.
5. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 2, in which the circulating cryogen circulates by natural convection.
6. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 1, in which the second heat exchanger comprises fins that are parallel to the axis of the expander formed by one of machined slots in said cylindrical shell and folded ribbon of copper thermally bonded to the external surface of said cylindrical shell.
7. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 6, in which gas flowing through the inlet port flows up through the fins on one side of said second heat exchanger to the top plenum space and returns down through the fins on the other side, the bottom plenum space, and the outlet port.
8. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 1, in which gas flowing through the inlet port flows up through a by-pass passage inside said housing to the top plenum space and returns down through said second heat exchanger, the bottom plenum, and the outlet port.
9. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 8, in which the circulating cryogen circulates by natural convection.
10. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 1, in which said second gas is circulated by one of a fan, a liquid pump, and natural circulation.
11. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 1, in which a heater is in thermal contact with said second heat exchanger.
12. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 1, in which the cold displaced volume comprises a first volume between the regenerator and the first heat exchanger that is less than 20% of the total.
13. A cryogenic expander operating on the GM or Stirling cycle cooling a circulating cryogen comprising; a displacer, in a cylinder, reciprocating between a warm end and a cold end, the motion creating a cold displaced volume, a regenerator through which a first gas flows in and out of the cold displaced volume, a first heat exchanger between the regenerator and the displaced volume that transfers heat radially through a cylindrical shell from a second gas that condenses in a second heat exchanger, external to said shell, to the first gas, said second heat exchanger enclosed in a housing having a single port for said second gas, and said port is on the bottom of the housing.
14. A cryogenic expander in accordance with claim 12, in which said port drains liquid from said housing when the axis of the expander is horizontal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTIONS OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0021] The drawings use the same number to show the same part, and the words up and top refer towards the warm end while down and bottom refer towards the cold end.
[0022]
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[0024]
[0025] The pressure boundary at the cold end of cylinder 2 of expander 100, shown in
[0026] Expander 200, shown in FIG's 4a and 4b, shows folded ribbon as the internal heat exchanger 14 and is otherwise similar to expander 100 except the external components are designed to cool a circulating gaseous cryogen, rather than condensing a cryogen. This is done by having return port 21a, which brings gas that has cooled a load, through the bottom of housing 16, into flow passage 18 which connects to manifold 19 at the top of external folded ribbon 14, and distributes the gas to flow back down through the folded ribbons. Cooled gas then flows out through outlet port 21b. Flow passage 18 is separated from outlet manifold 20 by barrier 23.
[0027] Another means of directing a circulating gaseous cryogen through external heat exchanger 14 is shown in
[0028] Expander 300 has an extension 12b below regenerator 3 that has a close fit inside sleeve 17 which in turn has a close fit inside internal heat exchanger 6. Extension 12b has a smaller diameter than displacer 1 and thus divides the cold displaced volume into an inner displaced volume, 5a, and an outer displaced volume, 5b. Seal 49 prevents gas from leaking between displaced volumes 5a and 5b and forces gas to flow through radial passages 15 into cold displaced volume 5b, where some of it remains, and the balance flows through internal heat exchanger 6 into cold displaced volume 5a. Volume 5b is approximately 15% of the total cold displaced volume, which means that only about 85% of the gas that would flow through internal heat exchanger 6 in expanders 100 and 200, flows internal heat exchanger 6 in expander 300. This might be thermodynamically advantageous because the last 15% of the gas that flows out of regenerator 3 is significantly warmer than the first 85% so even though less gas flows through internal heat exchanger 6 it is colder on average.
[0029]
[0030] Table 1 has an example that compares an external heat exchanger made by machining fins on the outside of shell 4 with a folded ribbon. The design is based on transferring 400 W of cooling at 80 K by circulating 5 g/s of helium at 200 kPa in which both designs have the same temperature differences, in the gas and the fins, and the same pressure drop. The thickness of the machined fin is at its root and the weight of copper for the machined fin includes the material removed from the groove.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Comparison of Machined Fins with Folded Ribbon Fins Machined Ribbon Outside Dia. of Shell 4 - mm 115 115 Inside Dia. of Housing 16 - mm 140 131 Width of Fin, W - mm 100 100 Gap, G - mm 1.0 0.8 Thickness, T - mm 2.0 0.5 Number of Gaps 120 310 Weight of Cu to form fins - kg 4.0 1.0
[0031] The folded ribbon is seen to provide a significant reduction in the diameter of housing 16 and the amount of material needed to make the fins.
[0032] In the claims top and bottom, and up and down, refer to the expander when the axis is vertical with the cold end down.