Heat pump
10337746 ยท 2019-07-02
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F25B1/053
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B39/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02A40/963
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F25B27/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B1/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F21/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B30/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F13/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D2021/007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D2021/0071
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D2021/0019
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B30/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B30/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B39/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B9/002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02B10/40
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F24D2200/11
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24D15/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F25B1/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B27/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B30/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B39/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24D15/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B39/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B30/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B1/053
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A heat pump has an evaporator for evaporating water as a working liquid so as to produce a working vapor, the evaporation taking place at an evaporation pressure of less than 20 hPa. The working vapor is compressed to a working pressure of at least 25 hPa by a dynamic-type compressor so as to then be liquefied within a liquefier by direct contact with liquefier water. The heat pump is preferably an open system, wherein water present in the environment in the form of ground water, sea water, river water, lake water or brine is evaporated, and wherein water which has been liquefied again is fed to the evaporator, to the soil or to a water treatment plant.
Claims
1. A heat pump comprising: an evaporator for evaporating water as a working liquid to generate a working vapor, the evaporator comprising an evaporation chamber and being adapted to generate an evaporation pressure of less than 20 hPa within the evaporation chamber, so that the water will evaporate at temperatures below 18 C.; a compressor coupled to the evaporator for compressing the working vapor, the compressor being adapted to compress the working vapor to a working pressure of more than 5 hPa above the evaporation pressure; and a liquefier for liquefying a compressed working vapor, the liquefier being adapted to output a heat which has been acquired during the liquefaction to a heating system, wherein the compressor comprises a plurality of dynamic-type compressors, the plurality of dynamic-type compressors comprising a first dynamic-type compressor and a last dynamic-type compressor, wherein the dynamic-type compressors of the plurality of dynamic-type compressors are arranged one behind the other, wherein the first dynamic-type compressor is configured to compress the working vapor to an intermediate pressure, wherein the last dynamic-type compressor is configured to compress the working vapor to the working pressure, and wherein one or more heat exchangers are arranged downstream from the first dynamic-type compressor or a further dynamic-type compressor of the plurality of dynamic-type compressors, and wherein the one or more heat exchangers is configured to withdraw heat from the working vapor and to heat water with the heat withdrawn.
2. The heat pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein the evaporator comprises a gas separator adapted to remove at least part of a gas dissolved in the water to be evaporated from the water to be evaporated, so that the removed part of the gas is not sucked in by the compressor via the evaporation chamber.
3. The heat pump as claimed in claim 2, wherein the gas separator is arranged to feed the removed part of the gas to non-evaporated water so that the gas is transported off by the non-evaporated water.
4. The heat pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least two dynamic-type compressors of the plurality of dynamic-type compressors, which are arranged one behind the other comprise radial-flow wheels driven with rotational directions directed in a manner opposed to one another.
5. The heat pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least two dynamic-type compressors of the plurality of dynamic-type compressors are configured to be controlled independent from each other at least with regard to numbers of revolution, so that the at least two dynamic-type compressors are operable with different numbers of revolutions.
6. The heat pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least one heat exchanger from the one or more heat exchangers is adapted to reduce the temperature of the working vapor to a temperature, at a maximum, which is higher than a temperature of the working vapor prior to a dynamic-type compressor of the plurality of dynamic-type compressors connected preceding to the at least one heat exchanger.
7. The heat pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least one of the first dynamic-type compressor and the last dynamic-type compressor is a radial-flow dynamic-type compressor comprising a radial-flow wheel which comprises a plurality of vanes extending from one or several inner radii to one or several outer radii, the vanes extending to the outside, with regard to the radial-flow wheel, from different radii of the radial-flow wheel.
8. The heat pump as claimed in claim 7, wherein at least one vane is arranged between two vanes extending to the outside, with regard to the radial-flow wheel, from a radius, the at least one vane extending to the outside, with regard to the radial-flow wheel, from a larger radius.
9. The heat pump as claimed in claim 7, wherein the radial-flow wheel comprises a base and a cover, and wherein at least one vane of the radial-flow wheel extends to the outside from a larger radius than another vane being integrally connected both to the cover and to the base.
10. The heat pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least one of the first dynamic-type compressor and the last dynamic-type compressor is implemented as a turbo compressor comprising a radial-flow wheel, or wherein the heat pump comprises a controller configured for maintaining a target temperature within a heating circuit, wherein the controller is configured to control a number of revolutions of a dynamic-type compressor being arranged upstream in a cascade, so that when a higher target temperature is input into the controller, a number of revolutions of the dynamic-type compressor arranged upstream in the cascade is increased less than a number of revolutions of a dynamic-type compressor arranged downstream in the cascade.
11. A heat pump comprising: an evaporator for evaporating water as a working liquid to generate a working vapor, the evaporator comprising an evaporation chamber and being adapted to generate an evaporation pressure of less than 20 hPa within the evaporation chamber, so that the water will evaporate at temperatures below 18 C.; a dynamic-type compressor coupled to the evaporator for compressing the working vapor, the compressor being adapted to compress the working vapor to a working pressure of more than 5 hPa above the evaporation pressure; and a liquefier for liquefying a compressed working vapor, the liquefier being adapted to output a heat which has been acquired during the liquefaction to a heating system, wherein the liquefier comprises a drain to drain off liquefied working liquid, and wherein the drain to drain off liquefied working liquid comprises a drain portion arranged within the evaporator, wherein the drain portion is configured for providing a nucleating effect for a bubble evaporation within the evaporator.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Embodiments of the present invention will be detailed subsequently referring to the appended drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
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(22) The water vapor is fed, by suction line 12, to a compressor/liquefier system 14 comprising a dynamic-type compressor, such as a radial-flow compressor, for example in the form of a turbocompressor designated by 16 in
(23) The dynamic-type compressor is coupled to a liquefier 18 which is configured to liquefy the compressed working vapor. By the liquefaction, the energy contained within the working vapor is fed to the liquefier 18 so as to be fed to a heating system via the advance flow 20a. Via backflow 20b, the working fluid flows back into the liquefier.
(24) In accordance with the invention, it is preferred to extract the heat (heat energy) from the high-energy water vapor directly by the colder heating water, said heat (heat energy) being taken up by the heating-system water so that the latter heats up. In the process, so much energy is extracted from the vapor that same becomes liquefied and also participates in the heating cycle.
(25) Thus, a loading of material into the liquefier, or the heating system, takes place, the loading being regulated by a drain 22, such that the liquefier in its liquefaction chamber has a water level which remains below a maximum level despite the constant supply of water vapor and, thereby, of condensate.
(26) As has already been explained, it is preferred to take an open cycle, i.e. to evaporate the water, which represents the heat source, directly without a heat exchanger. Alternatively, however, the water to be evaporated could also initially be heated up by an external heat source via a heat exchanger. However, what is to be taken into account in this context is that this heat exchanger again signifies losses and expenditure in terms of apparatus.
(27) In addition, it is preferred, in order to avoid losses for the second heat exchanger which has been necessarily present so far on the liquefier side, to use the medium directly even there, i.e. to let the water, which comes from the evaporator, circulate directly within the floor heating system, when considering a house comprising a floor heating system.
(28) Alternatively, however, a heat exchanger may be arranged, on the liquefier side, which is fed with the advance flow 20a and which comprises the backflow 20b, this heat exchanger cooling the water present within the liquefier, and thus heating up a separate floor heating liquid which will typically be water.
(29) Due to the fact that the working medium used is water, and due to the fact that only the evaporated portion of the ground water is fed into the dynamic-type compressor, the degree of purity of the water is irrelevant. Just like the liquefier and, as the situation may be, the directly coupled floor heating system, the dynamic-type compressor is provided with distilled water such that, in comparison with present-day systems, the system has a reduced maintenance expenditure. In other words, the system is self-cleaning, since the system is only ever fed with distilled water, and since the water within the drain 22 is thus not contaminated.
(30) In addition, it shall be noted that dynamic-type compressors have the properties thatsimilar to a turbine of an airplanethey do not contact the compressed medium with problematic materials such as oil. Instead, the water vapor is compressed only by the turbine or the turbocompressor, but is not contacted with oil or any other medium negatively affecting its purity, and thus is not contaminated.
(31) The distilled water dissipated through the drain may thus be readily re-fed to the ground waterif no other regulations are in the way. Alternatively, however, it may also be made to seep away, e.g. in the garden or in an open area, or it may be fed to a waste water purification plant via the sewage system, if the regulations permit.
(32) The inventive combination of water as a working substance with the useful enthalpy-difference ratio which is doubly improved as compared with R134a, and due to the consequently reduced requirements placed upon the closed nature of the system (rather, an open system is preferred) and due to the use of the dynamic-type compressor, by means of which the necessary compression factors are efficiently achieved without any negative effects on the purity, an efficient heat pump process which is neutral in terms of environmental damage is provided which will become even more efficient if the water vapor is directly liquefied within the liquefier, since, in this case, not one single heat exchanger will be necessary in the entire heat pump process.
(33) In addition, any losses associated with the piston compression are dispensed with. In addition, the losses, which are very low in the case of water and which otherwise occur in the choking, may be used to improve the evaporation process, since the drain water having the drain temperature, which will typically be higher than the ground water temperature, is advantageously used to trigger a bubble evaporation within the evaporator by means of a structuring 206 of a drain pipe 204, as will be explained in
(34) A preferred embodiment of the present invention will be explained below in detail with reference to
(35) The riser pipe is arranged within a riser pipe basin 116 which is filled with water by a pump 118 which is preferably provided. The levels in 116 and 108 are connected to one another in accordance with the principle of the communicating pipes, gravity and the different pressures within 116 and 108 ensuring that the water is transported from 116 to 108. The water level present in the riser pipe basin 116 is preferably arranged such that, even with different air pressures, the level will never fall below the inlet of the riser pipe 102 so as to prevent air from entering.
(36) Preferably, evaporator 10 comprises a gas separator configured to remove at least part, e.g. at least 50% of a gas dissolved in the water to be evaporated, from the water to be evaporated, so that the removed part of the gas will not be sucked in by the compressor via the evaporation chamber. Preferably, the gas separator is arranged to feed the removed part of the gas to a non-evaporated water so that the gas is transported off by the non-evaporated water. Dissolved gases may be oxygen, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, etc. These gases evaporate mostly at a higher pressure than water does, so that the gas separator may be arranged downstream from the expander 108, so that oxygen etc., which has been evaporated within the gas separator, will exit from the water which has just not been evaporated yet, and will preferably be fed into the return pipe 113. Feeding-in is preferably performed at that location of the return pipe 113 at which the pressure is so low that the gas is again taken along into the ground water by the back-flowing water. Alternatively, the separated gas may also be collected and be disposed of at specific intervals or be constantly vented, i.e. released to the atmosphere.
(37) Typically, the ground water, sea water, river water, lake water, the brine or any other naturally occurring aqueous solution will have a temperature of between 8 C. and 12 C. By lowering the temperature of 1 l of water by 1 C., a power of 4.2 kW may be generated. If the water is cooled by 2.5 C., a power of 10.5 kW is generated. Preferably, a current of water with a current intensity depending on the heat power, in the example one liter per second, flows through the riser pipe.
(38) If the heat pump works at a relatively high load, the evaporator will evaporate about 6 ml per second, which corresponds to a vapor volume of about 1.2 cubic meters per second. Depending on the heating-system water temperature called for, the dynamic-type compressor is controlled with regard to its compression power. If a heating advance flow temperature of 45 C. is desired, which is largely sufficient even for extremely cold days, the dynamic-type compressor will have to increase the pressure, which may have been generated at 10 hPa, to a pressure of 100 hPa. If, on the other hand, an advance flow temperature of, e.g., 25 is sufficient for the floor heating system, the compression that must be effected by the dynamic-type compressor only will have a factor of 3.
(39) The power generated is thus determined by the compressor rating, i.e., on the one hand, by the compression factor, i.e. the degree to which the compressor compresses and, on the other hand, by the volume flow generated by the compressor. If the volume flow increases, the evaporator will have to evaporate more, the pump 118 transporting more ground water into the riser pipe basin 116, so that more ground water is fed to the evaporation chamber. On the other hand, if the dynamic-type compressor provides a lower compression factor, less ground water will flow from the bottom to the top.
(40) However, it shall also be noted here that it is preferred to control the passage of ground water through the pump 118. According to the principle of the communicating pipes, the filling level within container 116, or the displacement capacity of the pump 118, establishes the amount of flow through the riser pipe. Therefore, an increase in the efficiency of the plant may be achieved, since the control of the flow is decoupled from the suction power of the dynamic-type compressor.
(41) No pump is necessary for pumping the ground water from below into the evaporation chamber 100. Rather, this occurs by itself. This automatic rise up to the evacuated evaporation chamber also assists the fact that the negative pressure of 20 hPa may be readily achieved. No evacuation pumps or the like are necessary for this purpose. Rather, only a riser pipe having a height of more than 9 m is necessary. Then a purely passive negative-pressure generation is achieved. However, the negative pressure necessary may also be generated using a considerably shorter riser pipe, for example when the implementation of
(42) In the preferred embodiment, the dynamic-type compressor is configured as a radial-flow compressor with a rotatable wheel, it being possible for the wheel to be a slow-speed radial-flow wheel, a medium-speed radial-flow wheel, a half-axial flow wheel or an axial flow wheel, or a propeller, as are known in the art. Radial-flow compressors are described in Strmungsmaschinen, C. Pfleiderer, H. Petermann, Springer-Verlag, 2005, pp. 82 and 83. Thus, such radial-flow compressors comprise, as the rotatable wheel, the so-called center runner, the form of which depends on the individual requirements. Generally, any dynamic-type compressors may be employed, as are known as turbocompressors, fans, blowers or turbocondensers.
(43) In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, radial-flow compressor 16 is configured as several independent dynamic-type compressors which may be controlled independently at least with regard to their number of revolutions, so that two dynamic-type compressors may have different numbers of revolutions. Such an implementation is depicted in
(44) The cascaded dynamic-type compressors operated independently are preferably controlled by a controller 250 which maintains, on the input side, a target temperature within the heating circuit and, as the situation may be, also an actual temperature within the heating circuit. Depending on the target temperature desired, the number of revolutions of a dynamic-type compressor which is arranged upstream in the cascade and is referred to by n1, by way of example, and the number of revolutions n2 of a dynamic-type compressor which is arranged downstream in the cascade are changed such as is depicted by
(45) The point of intersection between the numbers of revolutions n1 and n2 which are individually plotted may occur at any point, i.e. at any target temperature, or may not occur, as the case may be. However, it is generally preferred to increase a dynamic-type compressor arranged closer to the liquefier within the cascade more highly, with regard to its number of revolutions, than a dynamic-type compressor arranged upstream in the cascade, should a higher target temperature be desired.
(46) The reason for this is that the dynamic-type compressor arranged downstream in the cascade must process further already compressed gas which has been compressed by a dynamic-type compressor arranged upstream in the cascade. In addition, this ensures that the vane angle of vanes of a radial-flow wheel, as is also discussed with reference to
(47) In this regard, it is preferred, in addition, for a dynamic-type compressor which is arranged more in the direction of the liquefier within the cascade to have a rotational direction of the radial-flow wheel which is opposed to the rotational direction of the radial-flow wheel arranged upstream in the cascade. Thus, an almost optimum entry angle of the vanes of both axial flow wheels in the gas stream may be achieved, such that a favorable efficiency factor of the cascade of dynamic-type compressors occurs not only within a small target temperature range, but within a considerably broader target temperature range of between 20 and 50 degrees, which is an optimum range for typical heating applications. The inventive revolutions control and, as the case may be, the use of counter-rotating axial flow wheels thus provides an optimum match between the variable gas stream at a changing target temperature, on the one hand, and the fixed vane angles of the axial flow wheels, on the other hand.
(48) In preferred embodiments of the present invention, at least one or preferably all of the axial flow wheels of all dynamic-type compressors are made of plastic having a tensile strength of more than 80 MPa. A preferred plastic for this purpose is polyamide 6.6 with inlaid carbon fibers. This plastic has the advantage of having a high tensile strength, so that axial flow wheels of the dynamic-type compressors may be produced from this plastic and may nevertheless be operated at high numbers of revolutions.
(49) Preferably, axial flow wheels are employed in accordance with the invention, as are shown, for example, at reference numeral 260 in
(50) When looking at
(51) For technical reasons, however, it is not possible to mount vanes which extend from the inside, i.e. from the radius rW, to the outside as tightly as possible, since the suction opening having the radius r1 then will become more and more blocked.
(52) It is therefore preferred, in accordance with the invention, to provide vanes 272 and 274 and 276, respectively, which extend over less than the length of vane 262. In particular, the vanes 272 do not extend from rW fully to the outside, but from R1 to the exterior with regard to the radial-flow wheel, R1 being larger than rW. By analogy therewith, as is depicted by way of example in
(53) These ratios are schematically depicted in
(54) Thus, at least one vane is preferably arranged between two vanes extending further to the inside, said one vane not extending so far toward the inside. This results in that the suction area is not plugged, and/or that areas having a smaller radius are not too heavily populated with vanes, whereas areas having a larger radius are more densely populated with vanes, so that the speed distribution of the exiting gas which exists at the output of the radial-flow wheel, i.e. where the compressed gas leaves the radial-flow wheel, is as homogeneous as possible. With the inventive preferred radial-flow wheel in
(55) It shall be noted at this point that the relatively expensive and complicated shape of the radial-flow wheel in
(56) It shall be noted at this point that very high numbers of revolutions of the radial-flow wheel are preferred, so that the acceleration acting upon the vanes takes on quite considerable values. For this reason it is preferred that particularly the shorter vanes 272, 274, 276 be fixedly connected not only to the base but also to the cover, such that the radial-flow wheel may readily withstand the accelerations occurring.
(57) It shall also be noted in this context that the use of plastic is favorable also because of the superior impact strength of plastic. For example, it cannot be ruled out that ice crystals or water droplets will hit the radial-flow wheel at least of the first compressor stage. Due to the large accelerations, very large impact forces result here which plastics having sufficient impact strength readily withstand. In addition, the liquefaction within the liquefier preferably occurs on the basis of the cavitation principle. Here, small vapor bubbles collapse, on the basis of this principle, within a volume of water. From a microscopic point of view, quite considerable speeds and forces arise there which may lead to material fatigue in the long run, but which can be readily controlled when using a plastic having sufficient impact strength.
(58) The compressed gas output by the last compressor 174, i.e. the compressed water vapor, is then fed to the liquefier 18 which may be configured such as is depicted in
(59) The embodiment in
(60) By contrast,
(61) Since the water level within the liquefier would rise more and more due to the vapor being constantly introduced into the liquefier, the drain 22 is provided, via which, e.g., about 4 ml per second must also drain off for the water level within the liquefier to essentially not change. To this end, a drain pump, or a drain valve, 192 for pressure regulation is provided, such that without pressure loss, the necessary amount of, e.g., 4 ml per second, i.e. the quantity of water vapor which is fed to the liquefier while the compressor is running, is drained off again. Depending on the implementation, the drain may be introduced into the riser pipe as is shown at 194. Since all kinds of pressures between one bar and the pressure existing within the evaporation chamber are present along the riser pipe 102, it is preferred to feed in the drain 22 into the riser pipe at that location 194 where roughly the same pressure exists as it exists downstream from the pump 192, or valve 192. Then, no work has to be done to re-feed the drain water to the riser pipe.
(62) In the embodiment shown in
(63) However, the backflow 112 from the evaporator may be fed to the ground water without any problems, since the water flowing back there only was in contact with the riser pipe and the return line, but has not exceeded the evaporation boundary between the evaporation expander 108 and the output to the dynamic-type compressor.
(64) It shall be noted that in the embodiment shown in
(65) In the following, reference shall be made to
(66) In addition, it is preferred to provide, around the liquefier, a sound insulation 208 which may be configured in an active or a passive manner. A passive sound insulation will insulate the frequencies of the sound generated by the liquefaction as well as possible, similar to thermal insulation. It is equally preferred to subject the other components of the system to the sound insulation.
(67) Alternatively, the sound insulation may also be configured to be active, in which case it would have, for example, a microphone for sound measurement, and would trigger, in response thereto, a sound countereffect, such as to cause an outer liquefier wall etc. to vibrate with, e.g., piezoelectric means.
(68) The embodiment shown in
(69) Not until a sufficient portion of the water has been removed from the line 198 will a vapor be made to condensate within the liquefier. An embodiment of such a type thus has a certain delay time which is necessary until the water volume 180 is heated up again by the compressed vapor. In addition, the work necessary for removing the water which has entered into the line 198 from the line 198 again is no longer retrievable and is thus lost with regard to the heating system, such that small-scale losses in terms of the efficiency factor must be accepted.
(70) An alternative embodiment which overcomes this problem is shown in
(71) If, in the implementation of
(72) The flow rate present at the edge of the expander, i.e. where arrow 218 is indicated, is considerably lower than in the center. It is preferred to operate the liquefier as a temperature layer storage such that the heat pump and, in particular, the compressor need not run without interruption, but must run only when there is a need, as is also the case for normal heating installations operating, for example, with an oil burner.
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(74) Since the inventive system operates with water, no gases will develop, even with a high gas leakage, which have not already been dissolved within the ground water previously, so that the gas separated off entails no environmental problems whatsoever. It shall again be emphasized that, due to the inventive dynamic-type compressor compression and due to the use of water as the working fluid, there will be no contamination or soiling by synthetic coolants or by oil, due to an oil cycle, at any point. As the working medium, the inventive system at any point has water or vapor, which is at least as clean as the original ground water, or is even cleaner than the ground water due to the evaporation within the evaporator, since the water is distilled water once the compressed vapor has been liquefied again within the liquefier.
(75) In the following, a preferred embodiment of the evaporator will be depicted with reference to
(76) To accelerate the evaporation process, alternatively or additionally, an area of the evaporator which has water which is to be evaporated located thereon, i.e. the surface of the expander or a part thereof, may be configured from a rough material to provide nuclei for nucleate boiling. Alternatively or additionally, a rough grate may also be arranged (close to) below the water surface of the water to be evaporated.
(77)
(78) The vapor bubbles forming there will immediately act as boiling nuclei for the evaporator water which is pumped via the inflow 102. Thus, efficient nucleate boiling may be triggered within the evaporator without any major additional measures being taken, this triggering existing, similar to
(79) The embodiment shown in
(80) If there are water-regulatory provisions or any other reasons why this is not admissible, the embodiment shown in
(81)
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(83) The large diameter d2 of the expander ranges between 15 and 100 cm in preferred embodiments, and is smaller than 25 cm in particularly preferred embodiments. The small configuration of the evaporator is possible if efficient measures for triggering and assisting nucleate boiling are employed, as has been explained above. The small radius d1 and the large radius d2 have an area of curvature of the expander located between them which is preferably configured such that within this area a laminar flow results which is decreased from a fast flow rate, preferably within the range from 7 to 40 cm per second, to a relatively small flow rate at the edge of the expander. Large discontinuities of the flow rate, for example eddies within the area of the line of curvature, or bubbling effects above the inflow, if the expander is viewed from the top, are preferably avoided since they may possibly have a negative effect on the efficiency factor.
(84) In particularly preferred embodiments, the expander has a shape which results in that the height of the water level above the expander surface is smaller than 15 mm and is preferably between 1 and 5 mm. It is therefore preferred to employ an expander 200 configured such that in more than 50% of the area of the expander, when viewed from the top, a water level exists which is smaller than 15 mm. Thus, efficient evaporation may be ensured across the entire area which is even increased, it terms of its efficiency, when measures for triggering nucleate boiling are used.
(85) Thus, the inventive heat pump serves to efficiently supply buildings with heat, and it no longer necessitates any working substance which negatively affects the world climate. In accordance with the invention, water is evaporated under very low pressure, is compressed by one or several dynamic-type compressors arranged one behind the other, and is again liquefied into water. The transported energy is used for heating. In accordance with the invention, use is made of a heat pump which preferably represents an open system. Here, open system means that ground water or any other available aqueous medium carrying heat energy is evaporated, compressed and liquefied under low pressure. The water is directly used as the working substance. Thus, the energy contained is not transmitted to a closed system. The liquefied water is preferably used directly within the heating system and is subsequently supplied back to the ground water. To capacitively decouple the heating system, it may also be terminated by a heat exchanger.
(86) The efficiency and usefulness of the present invention is represented by means of a numerical example. If one assumes an annual heating requirement of 30,000 kWh, in accordance with the invention about maximally 3,750 kWh of electrical current must be expended for operating the dynamic-type compressor to achieve this, since the dynamic-type compressor need only provide about an eighth of the entire amount of heat necessary.
(87) The eighth results from the fact that a sixth needs to be expended in the event of extreme cold only, and that, for example, at transition temperatures such as in March or at the end of October, the efficiency factor may rise to a value of more than 12, so that, on average, a maximum of one eighth must be expended over the year.
(88) At electricity prices of about 10 eurocents per kWh, which may be arrived at for electricity if one buys electricity for which the power station need not guarantee that operation will be free from interruptions, this roughly corresponds to annual costs of 375 euros. If one wants to generate 30,000 kWh using oil, one would need about 4,000 l, which would correspond to a price of 2,800 euros on the basis of current oil prices, which are very unlikely to fall in the future. In accordance with the invention, one can therefore save 2,425 euros per annum! In addition, it shall also be pointed out that in comparison with burning oil or gas for heating purposes, up to 70% of the amount of CO2 released is saved by means of the inventive concept.
(89) To reduce the manufacturing cost and also to reduce the maintenance and assembly costs, it is preferred to configure the housings of the evaporator, of the compressor and/or of the liquefier and also, particularly, the radial-flow wheel of the dynamic-type compressor, from plastic, and in particular from injection molding plastic. Plastic is well suited since plastic is corrosion-resistant with regard to water, and since, in accordance with the invention, the maximum temperatures are preferably clearly below the deformation temperatures of employable plastics compared to conventional heating systems. In addition, assembly is particularly simple since negative pressure is present within the system consisting of evaporator, compressor and liquefier. Thus, substantially fewer requirements are placed on the sealings since the entire atmospheric pressure assists in keeping the housings leak-proof. Also, plastic is particularly well suited since at no location in the inventive system are there high temperatures which would necessitate the use of expensive special plastics, metal or ceramic. By means of plastic injection molding, the shape of the radial-flow wheel may also be optimized in any manner desired while being manufactured in a simple manner and at low cost despite its complicated shape.
(90) Depending on the circumstances, the inventive method may be implemented in hardware or in software. Implementation can be on a digital storage medium, in particular a disk or CD, with electronically readable control signals which may interact with a programmable computer system such that the respective method is performed. Generally, the invention thus also consists in a computer program product with a program code, stored on a machine-readable carrier, for performing the inventive method when the computer program product runs on a computer. In other words, the invention may thus be realized as a computer program having a program code for performing the method when the computer program runs on a computer.
(91) While this invention has been described in terms of several embodiments, there are alterations, permutations, and equivalents which fall within the scope of this invention. It should also be noted that there are many alternative ways of implementing the methods and compositions of the present invention. It is therefore intended that the following appended claims be interpreted as including all such alterations, permutations and equivalents as fall within the true spirit and scope of the present invention.