HEAT EXCHANGERS
20190284998 ยท 2019-09-19
Inventors
Cpc classification
F28D7/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/0243
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F17/005
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64D27/026
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F28D2021/0021
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F2280/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/013
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F19/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D7/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D1/0472
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/141
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K9/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F2265/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F2260/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02C7/141
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D1/047
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D7/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D7/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F17/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F19/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/013
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A heat exchanger which may be used in an engine, such as a vehicle engine for an aircraft or orbital launch vehicle. is provided. The heat exchanger may be configured as generally drum-shaped with a multitude of spiral sections, each containing numerous small diameter tubes. The spiral sections may spiral inside one another. The heat exchanger may include a support structure with a plurality of mutually axially spaced hoop supports, and may incorporate an intermediate header. The heat exchanger may incorporate recycling of methanol or other antifreeze used to prevent blocking of the heat exchanger due to frost or ice formation.
Claims
1. A heat exchanger having a plurality of first conduit sections arranged to communicate the flow of a first fluid in heat exchange with a second fluid in a flow path which passes the first conduit sections, and a support of the plurality of first conduit sections, each of the first conduit sections comprising a plurality of tubes arranged to exchange heat, each first conduit section comprising a spiral section having a plurality of the tubes extending along in a spiral shape alongside and spaced from one another in rows, wherein at least one load element is provided between tubes in mutually radially spaced rows and is arranged to counter aerodynamic load applied to the tubes.
2. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which a said load element comprises a spacer fixing together tubes in radially spaced rows.
3. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 2, in which the spacer fixes the tubes together by brazing.
4. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which a said load element comprises an element provided between tubes of two adjacent said first conduit sections for transmitting load therebetween while allowing relative sliding motion therebetween in response to thermal change.
5. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 4, in which the load element comprises a shim.
6. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 4, in which said element is fixed to a tube in one said first conduit section and slidably engages a further said first conduit section.
7. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which a said load element comprises at least one I-beam-shaped element.
8. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which the tubes in a said first conduit section are arranged in from 2 and 40 rows spaced from one another in a radial direction.
9. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 8, in which the tubes in the said first conduit section are arranged spaced from one another in a radial direction in 4 said rows.
10. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which tubes are 1 to 3 meters long from a first header to a second header.
11. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which the tubes have a diameter which is about 1 mm.
12. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which the tubes have a wall thickness of 20 to 40 microns.
13. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which the tubes are arranged in 10 to 1000 rows spaced from one another in an axial direction.
14. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 13, in which said tubes are spaced from one another in an axial direction in 70 to 100 said rows.
15. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which the plurality of spiral sections are inter-nested with and oriented angularly spaced relative to one another.
16. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which said spiral sections are configured in the shape of a cylindrical drum.
17. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which the support includes at least one circular hoop to which a first said conduit is secured.
18. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 17, in which the support includes a plurality of said circular hoops which are configured spaced apart from one another in a generally cylindrical perforated drum structure, and in which at least one longeron member is provided for engagingly supported an adjacent said tube at a location substantially radially aligned with at least one said load element.
19. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, in which a plurality of said load elements are provided in a generally radially extending load path structure for reaction against aerodynamic load applied to the tubes.
20. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 19, in which the load path structure is adapted to permit relative movement between tubes of adjacent first said conduit sections in response to thermal change.
21. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, which includes a support structure comprising a generally cylindrical perforated drum structure.
22. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 21, which includes a plurality of mutually axially spaced hoop supports.
23. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 22, which includes a plurality of mutually radially spaced longeron members which are adapted to supportingly engage the said first conduit sections at a generally radially aligned load path structure.
24. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 22, in which the hoop supports are formed with bearers and/or attachment structure for locating header tubes of the first conduit sections on the hoop supports.
25. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 21, in which the hoop supports and longeron members are configured with generally rectangular or square flow spaces therebetween.
26. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 25, which includes at least one diagonally mounted bracing element extending across and within or adjacent at least one of the spaces.
27. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 26, wherein said at least one diagonally mounted bracing element extends diagonally thereacross at least one of the spaces.
28. A heat exchanger as claimed in claim 26, in which each said space has two diagonally mounted said bracing elements configured in an X configuration thereby providing four substantially triangular flow apertures in the region of each said space.
29. A vehicle engine including a combustion section and a heat exchanger or support structure as claimed in claim 1 adapted to cool air, as the second fluid, in aflow path directed towards the combustion section.
30. A vehicle engine as claimed in claim 29, which includes a helium supply for providing helium as the first fluid.
31. A flying machine, which includes a heat exchanger or support structure as claimed in claim 1.
32. A flying machine, which includes a vehicle engine as claimed in claim 29.
33. A flying machine as claimed in claim 31, wherein said flying machine is an aircraft or an orbital launch vehicle.
34. A heat exchanger assembly with a longitudinal extent in a longitudinal direction thereof and which comprises at least one generally annular heat exchanger module which comprises a heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1 and is arranged to communicate with a longitudinally extending duct, wherein at least one guide vane is provided for turning flow between one and the other selected from (a) generally radial through the heat exchanger module and (b) generally longitudinal along the longitudinally extending duct.
35. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 34, in which the guide vane is adapted to turn flow from generally radial to generally longitudinal.
36. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 34, which the guide vane is annular or ring-like.
37. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 34, in which the guide vane has a leading edge and a trailing edge.
38. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 37, in which said guide vane is of substantially constant thickness between the leading edge and the trailing edge.
39. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 37, in which the leading edge is arranged at an angle of 5 to 20 degrees relative to a radial direction.
40. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 37, in which the trailing edge is arranged at an angle of 5 to 15, or 8 to 12, degrees to the longitudinal direction.
41. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 37, in which the guide vane has a longitudinal extent in the longitudinal direction and in which the guide vane comprises a curvedly-flaring leading section and a substantially conical trailing section, the trailing section extending for 50 to 85% of the longitudinal extent.
42. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 41, wherein said curvedly-flaring leading section is substantially an arc in cross-section.
43. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 34, which includes a plurality of said guide vanes.
44. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 43, in which said plurality of guide vanes are arranged in a mutually overlapped series along the longitudinally extending duct.
45. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 43, in which the vanes are arranged with a narrowing therebetween so as to accelerate flow.
46. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 34, which includes a plurality of said heat exchanger modules arranged in a series along and around said longitudinal duct and in which a series of said guide vanes is provided extending adjacent and at least substantially the full longitudinal extent of at least one of said heat exchanger modules.
47. A heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 46, in which said series of guide vanes is provided extending adjacent and at least substantially the full longitudinal extent of all of said heat exchanger modules.
48. An engine which includes a heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 34, the heat exchanger being located upstream of an air compressor and/or combustion stage of the engine.
49. An engine, which includes a combustion section and a heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 34, adapted to cool air in a flow path directed towards the combustion section.
50. An engine as claimed in claim 49, wherein said engine is a vehicle engine.
51. An engine as claimed in claim 48, which includes a helium supply for providing helium as coolant flowable through the heat exchanger.
52. A flying machine, which includes a heat exchanger assembly as claimed in claim 34.
53. A flying machine, which includes an engine as claimed in claim 48.
54. A flying machine as claimed in claim 52, wherein said flying machine is an aircraft or an orbital launch vehicle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0147] The present invention may be carried out in various ways and one preferred embodiment of a heat exchanger, an engine and an aircraft in accordance with the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0208] As shown in
[0209] As shown in
[0210] In the preferred embodiment, the prior art heat exchanger 44 is replaced with the heat exchanger or pre-cooler 52 or a plurality of said heat exchangers 52 operable in parallel.
[0211]
[0212] Thus, as shown in
[0213] A liquid hydrogen pump 62 driven by a turbine 64 drives hydrogen through a heat exchanger 66 and the turbine 64 through a turbine 68 of a helium circulator 70 to the pre-burner 58 for partial pre-burner combustion, although some of the liquid hydrogen may be bypassed by valve 72 along the conduit 74 for combustion in the bypass burners 42.
[0214] The helium circulator 70 includes compressor 76 which drives gaseous helium through the heat exchanger 52 in counter-flow heat exchange with the air passing in the opposite direction (considering radial components of the paths of the air and helium), the helium then passing through heat exchanger 60 before travelling through helium turbine 78 before being cooled by the hydrogen in heat exchanger 66 and then passing back to the helium compressor 76. In this air breathing mode, the aircraft 10 is able to take off horizontally from stationary on the ground 80 (
[0215] Once the aircraft 10 is travelling at a significant speed of approximately Mach 5, it may switch from the air breathing mode into a full rocket mode. In the full rocket mode, the air inlet 43 is closed; the path of hydrogen through the cycle conduit 48 is similar to that in the air breathing mode although no hydrogen is diverted by the valve 72 to the bypass burner 42. The turbo compressor 46 is inactive. In the helium circuit, the gaseous helium now flows from the helium compressor 76 through heat exchanger 52 and heat exchanger 60 but then to turbine 82 before returning to the heat exchanger 66 and then to the helium compressor 76. The helium turbine 82 drives liquid oxygen pump 84 which directs oxygen towards the rocket nozzle 40 as well as partly via the pre-burner 58 and then as a pre-burner exhaust product together with unburnt hydrogen to the rocket nozzle 40 for combustion therein. The valve 56 is closed in the full rocket mode.
[0216] In the full rocket mode, the aircraft 10 may accelerate up through high Mach numbers and into orbit.
[0217] As shown in
[0218] The support drum 84 also includes an internal stiffener tube 98 which comprises a perforated tubular element having longitudinal members engaging along the full length of each of the longeron members 90, circumferentially extending members 102 extending along the full circumferential extent and engaging each of the support rings 86, 88, as well as X-shaped bracing members 104 located adjacent to generally square spaces 106 formed between the various longeron members 90 and support rings 86, 88. The stiffener tube 98 therefore forms a very stiff perforated lattice within the drum 84 which is designed to carry shear loads. The drum is capable of accepting a high radially inward load and the four triangles formed in the region of each X-shaped bracing member 104 enable substantial airflow to pass radially through the perforated drum 84 without a significant pressure drop.
[0219] As shown in
[0220]
[0221]
[0222] The helium tubes 120 are arranged in 200 rows spaced along the axial direction of the headers 106, 110 and four rows radially. The helium tubes 120 extend all of the way along from each inlet header 106 to each outlet header 110. Since there are 21 spiral sections 108 and each tube 120 is approximately 2 to 3 meters long, the heat exchanger 52 contains approximately 40 kilometers of the tubes 120. The tubes 120 are approximately 1 millimeter in diameter or somewhat more and have a wall thickness of about 20 to 40 microns.
[0223]
[0224] When the heat exchanger is operational, there is a substantial inward flow radially of air past all of the tubes 120 placing a substantial radially inward aerodynamic load on them. This load is countered by the substantially aligned shim plates 126, baffle elements 125, I-beams 130 and longeron members 90 which are aligned substantially in the radial direction. Accordingly, despite the very substantial aerodynamic loads, the tubes 120 may be securely supported.
[0225] In some cases, particularly at high Mach numbers, the air inlet temperature to the heat exchanger 52 at the radially outermost side in particular may be substantial, for example over 800 or even 1000? C. The temperature variation may cause a significant thermal change to the tubes 120 which, in particular, may grow in length with increasing temperature. Therefore, although the inlet header tube 106 is fixed in position to the perforated support drum 84, the outlet headers 110 may move as the tubes 120 grow in length. The shim plates 126 of each spiral section 108 may therefore slide relative to the adjacent baffle elements 125 to enable sliding substantially circumferential motion of the spiral sections 108 relative to one another. With lengthening of the tubes 120 due to increased temperature, the line of thrust of the baffle stations 116 through the baffle elements 125, shim plates 126 and I-beams 130 may rotate to be more in line with the truly radial direction of R from the centre axis 152 of the exchanger 52. The line of the baffle elements 125 is maintained substantially orthogonal to the tubes 120. Therefore, thermal expansion and contraction of the tubes in the circumferential (lengthwise) section of the tubes 120 may be allowed for. Naturally, the tubes 120 and other components may expand in the radial direction as they expand and contract with temperature and allowance for this is also provided.
[0226] As can be seen in
[0227] The inlet header fittings 140 at the other end of the header tubes 106 may be blocked off or may be fluidly connected via a ring manifold to the adjacent header fitting 140. The same is so for the outlet header fittings 142 at the other end of the outlet header tubes 110.
[0228] As can be seen for example in
[0229] As shown in
[0230] When a methanol pump 210 (
[0231] The methanol is able to prevent the formation of ice in the heat exchanger 52 which would block the airflow through the same. The methanol lowers the freezing temperature of water droplets condensed out within the heat exchanger to do this and a substantial proportion of the methanol and water are together removed from the airflow by catcher elements as will now be described.
[0232] Each outer one of the two pockets 160 shown in
[0233] As shown in
[0234] It will be seen that the catcher control plates 270 includes circular apertures 290 therethrough. The outlet header tubes 110 of the heat exchanger 52 pass through these apertures 290. It will also be seen that the catcher plate 270 includes nine extra apertures 292. The reason for this is that the adjacent catcher assembly 240 spaced one circumferentially around the heat exchanger 52 is arranged with the manifold 272 and end plugs 284 at opposite ends. Therefore, the apertures 292 serve to engage around the circular ends 250 of the catcher elements 162 of the adjacent catcher assembly 240 so that all of the catcher tubes 246 are supported at both ends. With a vacuum applied at the suction port 276, there is suction at the scavenge holes 266. With methanol and water in liquid form in the region of the catcher element 162, when the liquid touches the silica coated mesh 258, it becomes wetted onto the mesh 258 and is sucked through the mesh (the cavities 262 operating at a low pressure due to the small mesh pores), into the cavities 262, 260/pockets 252, then through the scavenge holes 266 and along inside the catcher tubes 246 to the respective manifold 274 and suction port 276. The scavenge holes 266 control the air flow sucked through with the liquid to a low level. In this way, a substantial proportion of the water vapour in the incoming air may be removed from the flow such that the heat exchanger 52 does not block with ice. Whereas the mesh 258 is shown with a circular section for the purposes of clarity in
[0235] As shown in
[0236] Since there are similar vacuum manifold plates 272, 304 at the opposite axial end of the heat exchanger, a similar arrangement of S-shaped flexible hoses 300, 306 and frost control catcher ring manifolds is also provided at that end, as shown in
[0237] It will be noted from
[0238] With the heat exchanger 52 in operation, the temperature at the inner catcher elements and/or outer ones may be monitored by a temperature sensor 350 which may send data to a controller 352 (
[0239] As shown in
[0240] As shown in
[0241] The shim plates 500 are optional. They locally increase air flow velocity so that aerodynamic forces are dominant over gravity. Gravity may tend to cause drops to move diagonally between catcher elements without hitting them and being caught. The shim plates 500 thus assist in the production of aerodynamic loads on droplets of water/anti-freeze which tend to direct them onto the catcher elements 126, 244. Other structures than the shim plates 500 be used in other embodiments for a similar purpose.
[0242] As shown in
[0243] Spokes 536 are slightly spiral in shape in this embodiment to provide a clearance but could be truly radial or have other configurations in other embodiments.
[0244]
[0245] It is envisaged that in some embodiments the methanol and water may be lead away from the exit 574 to a methanol separator, such as a distillation system, for re-concentrating the methanol for re-use so as to reduce overall methanol consumption and the weight of methanol to be carried.
[0246] Instead of the arrangement shown in
[0247] As shown in
[0248] The airflow simulators 582,584 and heat exchanger 52 are each radially inwardly bounded by a series 594,596,598 of overlapping guide vanes 600, each guide vane being an annular or ring-like element co-axial with the central axis 588. Each guide vane has a longitudinal extent along the axis 588 and in cross-section as shown in
[0249] The guide vanes 600 serve to locally turn and accelerate the air flow up to the air velocity generally in the outlet duct 586 such that upstream velocity distribution, i.e. upstream of the front and rear passive air flow simulators 582,584 and the heat exchanger 52, is forced to become more uniform such that the same or substantially the same air mass flow rate will flow through each even though they are different distances along the duct 586.
[0250] Although it was originally assumed that a centre body inserted into the outlet duct 586 would eradicate the problem of static pressure distribution along the outlet duct reducing in the direction towards the engine, such a centre body unexpectedly did not when tested by the present applicants have the desired effect and forced even more of the flow to be drawn through the rear of the installation, the reason for this (the present applicants have worked out) being that the air entering the outlet duct enters in the radial direction but subsequently follows a curved path in order that it turns through 90 degrees to exit the outlet duct and whenever the fluid follows a curved path there is a pressure gradient perpendicular to the flow and the flow entering the outlet duct towards the rear of the installation (nearer duct exit 589) was found to follow a tighter radius of curvature than the air entering the duct from nearer the front 591 thereof, with the tighter radius of curvature and high velocity towards the rear causing larger pressure gradients and resulting in a higher pressure region underneath the front passive airflow simulator 582 compared to the rear passive airflow simulator 584, thus causing higher velocities drawn across the rear passive air flow simulator 584 than the front passive airflow simulator 582.
[0251] The turning vanes 600 alleviate this problem locally at the exit of the drum-like air flow simulators 582,584 and heat exchanger 52. Although between neighbouring vanes 600 there will still be a pressure gradient in the axial direction, this is now constrained between boundaries of vane pairs. Hence by splitting the flow into a sufficient number of turning segments, the larger outlet duct pressure gradient can be removed or at least reduced. Not only are more even mass flow rates drawn through the three drums 582,584,52 but the streamlines across the heat exchanger 52 become almost radial (reducing a tendency without the vanes for more flow to pass through the heat exchanger 52 at one axial position than another), thereby helping to ensure a more uniform flow field through the heat exchanger 52 for the purposes of heat transfer.
[0252] With the turning vanes 600 installed, the pressure ratio, i.e. the ratio of pressure in the duct 586 in the region of the front airflow simulator 586 to the pressure in the region of the rear simulator 584 was seen to improve from a ratio of 72% without the guide vanes 600 to 89% with the guide vanes installed as shown in
[0253] The vanes 600 are thus shown to offer a solution to re-distributing the mass flow through a heat exchanger assembly having a longitudinal extent and leading to an axially-flowing duct and/or arrangements with multiple heat exchanger modules like the module 52 together with similar modules replacing the passive air flow simulators 582,584. The vanes 600 provide more uniform radial velocity distributions through the heat exchanger 52.
[0254] The blade outlet angles (B) may be varied along the axial length of the installation to increase uniformity of flow yet further and it is envisaged that a centre body 603 may be added as well such that a combined turning vane and centre body geometry can be utilised to provide a highly uniform flow distribution with minimal total pressure loss. With the outlet duct 586 generally cylindrical, the centre body 603 may be parabolic in cross-section, as schematically shown, in order to provide generally linear area increase per unit length (due to the 3D annular shape), enabling mass flux to remain substantially constant.
[0255] As shown in
[0256] As shown, for example, in
[0257] Although the embodiment shown in the majority of the drawings has only a single antifreeze/methanol injection point radially outside the matrix of tubes 120, it is envisaged that a flight-ready engine may have at least two injection points at different radial locations or more radial locations as shown in
[0258] The transition tubes 702 shown in
[0259] The concave dished pockets in the catcher elements 126 are approximately 50 mm long. The mesh 258 is wrapped tightly around the catcher tubes and secured to them. This forms 50 mm long pockets where each catcher tube 126 is dished, separated by the lands 254 where the mesh 258 contacts the tube so as to compartmentalise the suction cavities into separate pockets so that in case of screen damage remaining pockets remain operational.
[0260] The temperature control components including the temperature sensor 350 and controller 352 may be adapted or replaced in other embodiments with other apparatus known to the skilled person in the art form maintaining a constant airside temperature profile for frost control by providing the correct amount of methanol/water condensation at the particular catcher locations. The control in at least some embodiments is adapted to control the last (coldest) catcher row to be located at about ?80 to ?100 degrees C. air temperature where the methanol concentration should be about 80% mole fraction or 88% mass fraction to delay the freezing point to the lowest possible temperature.
[0261] The frost control system requires very little consumable materials compared to the previous publications mentioned above, i.e. the mass of methanol required is very low, translating into increased vehicle payload and improved economics.
[0262] The connection of the methanol manifold 174 to the spokes 536 is preferably via slotted holes (not shown) to allow for radial thermal expansion.
[0263] The methanol injector ring 174 shown in the drawings is composed of active injection tubes 710 with alternate plain non-fluid injecting tubes 712 of larger diameter. This arrangement provides increased air velocity close to the injection tubes 710 but the plain tubes 712 may be removed in other embodiments.
[0264] The light pressing of the outlet headers 110 against the matrix of tubes 120 using the springs 542 applies an initial preload which is augmented by the airside pressure drop when the engine is running and it also prevents the module spirals 108 from swinging open when the axis of the heat exchanger 52 is horizontal. The helium bypass controls, 350,352,354 may be replaced in other embodiments and the circuitry may be changed to include a recirculation loop and for alternative designs of catcher temperature control.
[0265] The heat exchanger may be used in other applications than with the engine shown and is not limited to use in the particular aerospace application described and may be used in various other aerospace and industrial applications.
[0266] Various features shown in the drawings may be varied to what is shown and described without departing from the scope of the invention. For example the end walls formed by the catcher plates 127 and bulkheads 530,532 may be in other embodiments formed in thin sheet material.
[0267] In embodiments with generally radially outward air flow (inside of radially inward), the tube support structure including the bird cage drum 84 and I-beams 130 may be reversed such that the drum 84 is positioned radially outside the spiral tubes 120 so as to resist outward loading thereon.
[0268] In situations where the fluid (such as air) being cooled does not contain water vapor, or if the fluid will not be cooled below 0 degrees, there is a relatively low likelihood that frost formation will impede the operation of the heat exchanger. In such situations, it may be advantageous to eliminate the frost control apparatus (e.g., the methanol injection system, the catcher assemblies 240, the shims 500, the doglegs 112,114, I-beams 130 in the region of the spiral sections 108, arcuate pockets 160, radial portions 122 and foils/joggles 124) from the heat exchanger, to, for example, reduce weight when the heat exchanger is used with an engine (such as the engine disclosed in GB 1318111.0).
[0269] Various modifications may be made to the described embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the accompanying claims.