Thermosyphon cooling for overheat protection
10274227 ยท 2019-04-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24S10/90
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S10/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S40/55
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E10/44
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
F24S90/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S10/50
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S10/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F24S90/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S90/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S40/55
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
This thermosyphon cooling system cools fluid by thermosyphon to prevent overheating at a solar collector when forced circulation stops. The introduction of the fluidic diode in the thermosyphon heat dump flow path affords more design and installation options, higher reliability, and the opportunity to manufacture solar collectors of less expensive alternative materials.
Claims
1. A method for cooling fluid at a solar thermal collector in a closed-loop fluidic system by thermosyphoning, comprising: impeding fluid flow through a heat-dissipating flow path during forced circulation with a fluidic diode; allowing fluid flow through the heat-dissipating flow path in the absence of forced circulation with the fluidic diode; and in the absence of forced circulation, dissipating heat acquired by the solar thermal collector along the heat-dissipating flow path to generate a fluid density difference that promotes thermosyphoning.
2. A solar thermal collector system that cools fluid in a closed-loop fluidic system by thermosyphoning, comprising: a solar thermal collector; a solar-heat-absorbing flow path of said collector; an inlet to said path; an outlet from said path; and a thermosyphon heat exchange flow path comprising; a heat-dissipating flow path; and a fluidic diode; whereby on the cessation of forced circulation, thermosyphoning begins and the fluid temperature is limited.
3. The solar thermal collector system according to claim 2 wherein the thermosyphon heat exchange flow path is interposed between a) the outlet or an extension of the outlet of the solar-heat-absorbing flow path and b) the inlet or an extension of the inlet of the solar-heat-absorbing flow path.
4. The solar thermal collector system according to claim 3 further including insulation between the solar-heat-absorbing flow path and the thermosyphon heat dump flow path.
5. The apparatus according to claim 3 wherein the heat-dissipating flow path is integrated into the solar collector.
6. The apparatus according to claim 3 wherein the heat-dissipating flow path is separate from the solar collector.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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(8) Drawings are not to scale. Arrows without adjacent numbers show the direction of flow. All piping in the figures is insulated unless otherwise noted.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
1. Definitions
(9) Fluidic system. Fluidic system is defined, herein, as a system comprising fluid, components and piping that come in contact with the fluid, and components for monitoring or controlling the system. A fluidic system may be open or closed. A fluidic system may be a subsystem of a larger fluidic system.
(10) Piping. Piping is defined, herein, as a system of joined and fluid-coupled fluidic conduits through which fluid may flow from one component of a fluidic system to another. Piping includes, but is not limited to, pipes, tubes, hoses, manifolds, connectors, such as tee's or elbows, and the means for joining them to each other and to components. Piping may be rigid or flexible. Piping connections may be welded, bolted-flange, threaded, soldered, union-joint, pressure-fit, push-fit, fitting-type, compression-type, heat-welded, heat-soldered, clamped, glued, or accomplished with other joining methods.
(11) Flow path. Flow path is defined, herein, as an assembly of joined and fluid-coupled fluidic system components, connectors and piping through which fluid may flow from one component or connector to the next. A flow path may be a sub-path of a larger flow path.
(12) Interposed. Interposed, in reference to piping and components of a fluidic system, is defined as being inserted into, joined to, and fluid coupled to, a flow path; or being inserted between one set of components and/or piping and another set of components and/or piping, and joined to and fluid coupled to them.
2. The Present Invention
(13) The present invention solves the loss-of-forced-circulation overheating problem for solar thermal collectors in a new way. In particular, the introduction of the fluidic diode in a thermosyphon heat dump flow path opens up the design and installation options for thermosyphon-based overheat protection systems and increases system reliability. The present invention is an apparatus and corresponding method for a fluidic system that provides a thermosyphon heat dump flow path that is parallel to the flow path through a solar collector and that on the cessation of forced circulation allows fluid in the solar collector to be cooled at any angle by thermosyphoning to prevent the device from overheating. The thermosyphon heat dump flow path is comprised of a heat dump and a fluidic diode with the top of the flow path near the outlet of the solar collector and the bottom of the flow path near the inlet of the solar collector. During forced circulation, the normal system operating mode, the fluidic diode prevents upward flow through the thermosyphon heat dump flow path. Flow only goes through the solar collector. When forced circulation stops, natural circulation commences with the fluidic diode now allowing downward flow through the thermosyphon heat dump flow path. The invention allows thermosyphon overheating protection systems to be designed and installed in ways they could not before.
(14) The fluidic diode is completely different from a check valve. The fluidic diode uses the fluid itself turning back into or onto itself to impede flow in one direction and to not impede flow in the other direction: the check valve uses a hinged gate, disc, piston or loose ball that plugs or closes an orifice to impede flow in one direction and unplugs or opens the orifice to not impede flow in the other direction. The fluidic diode has no moving parts whereas the check valve has moving parts. The check valve is characterized by its cracking pressure: the fluidic diode by its diodicity. There are several types of fluidic diodes: the vortex diode, the rectifier diode, and the scroll diode among others. All fluidic diodes types work and can be applied in the present invention, and choices among them depend on the configuration and geometry of the system design. The principal advantage of the fluidic diode over the check valve in this application is that it functions in any orientation. The plumbing industry, of which solar thermal plumbing is a part, has a great deal of experience with check valves, but almost none with fluidic diodes.
(15) During forced circulation, the fluid in a thermosyphon heat dump flow path is stagnant and relatively cool. So, during forced circulation, the solar collector is operating as if the thermosyphon heat dump flow path is not even there. The solar collector is operating normally, soaking up heat from the sun, with the fluid flowing through the collector and delivering its heat to downstream tanks, heat exchangers, or other heat sinks or end uses, and returning to the solar collector for more heat.
(16) The situation changes dramatically when forced circulation stops. Consider the situation in which the solar collector is on the left and the thermosyphon heat dump flow path is on the right. With the relatively hot fluid on the left side and the relatively cool fluid on the right side, thermosyphoning, or natural circulation, will commence when the fluid density on the right side is greater that the fluid density on the left side by enough to create a gravity-driven buoyancy pressure that overcomes the frictional forces. Fluid sinks on the right side and rises on the left side. Thus, hot fluid in the solar collector moves out of the device and into the thermosyphon heat dump flow path where it is cooled. This thermosyphoning can be steady or intermittent, but the net effect is to reduce and limit the fluid temperature and thereby prevent overheating.
3. Embodiments of the Present Invention
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(18) During forced-circulation operation, fluid flows from the supply piping 21 into the solar collector inlet 31. Flow does not go through the fluidic diode 42 because the flow in this direction is impeded. There is no flow through the thermosyphon heat dump flow path 41 and 42. Fluid in this flow path 41 and 42 is stagnant and cool relative to the fluid in the solar collector. Flow continues through the solar collector that heats the fluid that then exits at the solar collector outlet 32. Flow continues to the return piping 22 from the solar collector.
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(20) The fluidic diode 42 can be oriented at any angle and still function. Further, the fluidic diode makes it possible and practical to integrate the thermosyphon heat dump flow path into the solar collector itself and to make the solar collector out of plastic or other inexpensive materials.
(21) One design that derives from the schematics in
(22) The same collector above but flush-mounted to a pitched roof could not easily have finned tubes crossing the back side of the collector. For such an installation, finned tubes can be run across the roof along the top of the collector and down one side with an inline fluidic scroll diode. A short insulated piping extension interposed between the outlet of the solar collector and the inlet to the thermosyphon heat dump flow path would be added. If the flush-mounted collector were on a low sloped roof, such as a 3:12 pitch, the outlet piping extension would go upward, vertically away from the roof or flush with the roof, and be insulated to provide more vertical height of hot fluid and consequently more thermosyphon driving pressure to move the fluid more quickly in natural circulation. Plumbing these thermosyphon heat dump flow paths with a check valve instead is more difficult, and would create unsightly piping runs on the roof.
(23) Passively self-cooling solar collectors become possible and practical with the present invention, and
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(26) Referring to
(27) No external heat dumps are required for this design, and the design has much better aesthetics. Further, the design can be implemented in plastic because the collector can cool itself when forced circulation stops. During forced circulation, overheat protection must be provided separately from the present invention either by a separate overheat protection device or by a control system capable of sensing overheating and stopping forced circulation to allow the present invention to assume the overheat protection function.
(28) As shown in
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(30) During forced-circulation operation, fluid flows from the supply piping 24 into the manifold inlet 34. Flow does not go through the fluidic diode 45 because the flow in this direction is impeded. There is no flow through the thermosyphon heat dump flow path 44 and 45. Fluid in this flow path 44 and 45 is stagnant and cool relative to the fluid in the manifold. Flow continues through the manifold 15 that heats the fluid, then exits at the manifold outlet 35, and then goes upward through the piping extension 74. Flow continues to the return piping 25 from the solar collector.
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(32) Many other embodiments of the present invention are possible. Another embodiment is a boiler that requires overheat protection during a loss of forced circulation. Another embodiment is a chemical reactor with a cooling jacket that could overheat with a loss of forced circulation. One skilled in the art will recognize that the present invention can be utilized in embodiments beyond solar collectors.
4. How to Make the Present Invention
(33) When adding the present invention to a conventional solar collector, the invention can be plumbed behind or along the edges of the solar collector or connected solar collectors. One-inch copper pipe is typically used. The heat dump is typically finned tubes, such as copper pipe with aluminum fins. The solar collector outlet is extended vertically if necessary to promote thermosyphoning with insulated copper pipe. The inlet to the heat dump is connected to this extension or to the outlet itself. The heat dump is plumbed to the fluidic diode, and the fluidic diode is then plumbed to the inlet to the solar collector or to an extension of the inlet, thus creating one or more thermosyphon heat dump flow paths parallel to the flow paths through the solar collector. In some cases the finned tube heat dump and the fluidic diode can be integrated together with a section of the finned tubing housing a rectifier or scroll fluidic diode.
(34) The plastic collector embodiment described above can be produced by additive manufacturing or by conventional plastic extrusion and injection molding. The body of the collector can be extruded. A sheet of insulation is inserted into the extrusion. The top and bottom headers can be injection molded and then glued or plastic welded to the extrusion. Glazing would be produced separately and secured onto the plastic collector.
5. Best Mode
(35) The best mode of the present invention utilizes a passive heat dump, has no moving parts, and requires no power source. This mode has the highest reliability and affords the greatest design and installation flexibility.