HEAT EXCHANGER CORE DESIGN
20240418455 · 2024-12-19
Inventors
- Tomasz Meczkowski (Grajewo, PL)
- Sebastian Marcin ZURAW (Opole, PL)
- Hubert Jan SIUDZINSKI (Wroclaw, PL)
- Szymon BOROWSKI (Sobótka, PL)
- Stanislaw Jan ROSCISZEWSKI (Kraków, PL)
- Katarzyna Justyna GRZEBSKA (Wroclaw, PL)
- Wojciech Wladyslaw SLOMA (Krasne, PL)
- Ryan M. KELLEY (Granby, CT, US)
- Andrew M. Caldecutt (Vernon, CT, US)
- Grum T. Ngatu (South Windsor, CT, US)
Cpc classification
F28F7/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D7/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F28D1/0478
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D1/05366
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D2001/026
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F1/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D7/082
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A heat exchanger core includes a plurality of first medium channels along which a first medium is directed from a first first medium channel end to a second first medium end, and a plurality of second medium channels along which a second medium is directed from a first second medium channel end to a second second medium channel end. The first medium channels and/or the second medium channels are formed to have a first portion having a first cross-sectional shape and one or more second portions having a second, different cross-sectional shape. The channel transitions smoothly from the first to the second cross-sectional shape.
Claims
1. A heat exchanger core comprising: a plurality of first medium channels along which a first medium is directed from a first first medium channel end to a second first medium channel end; and a plurality of second medium channels along which a second medium is directed from a first second medium channel end to a second second medium channel end; wherein the first medium channels or the second medium channels are formed to have a first portion having a first cross-sectional shape and one or more second portions having a second, different cross-sectional shape; wherein the channel transitions smoothly from the first to the second cross-sectional shape.
2. The heat exchanger core of claim 1, wherein the plurality of first medium channels run in a direction transverse to the plurality of second medium channels.
3. The heat exchanger core of claim 2, further comprising: a plurality of layers each having a plurality of first medium channels, each layer separated by a layer of second medium channels.
4. The heat exchanger core of claim 1, wherein the one or more second portions is provided at one or both ends of the first medium channels and the first portion is the portion of the first medium channels between the ends.
5. The heat exchanger core of claim 1, wherein the one or more second portions is provided at one or more locations between the ends of the first medium channels.
6. The heat exchanger core of claim 1, wherein the first cross-sectional shape is an elliptical shape and the second cross-sectional shape is a non-elliptical shape.
7. The heat exchanger core of claim 1, wherein the second cross-sectional shape is a substantially circular shape.
8. The heat exchanger core of claim 1, wherein the first medium is a hot fluid and the second medium is a cold fluid.
9. The heat exchanger core of claim 1, formed by additive manufacture.
10. A heat exchanger comprising: an inlet manifold; an outlet manifold; and a heat exchanger core as claimed in claim 1 located with and in fluid communication with the inlet manifold and the outlet manifold.
11. The heat exchanger of claim 10, wherein the first first medium channel end is in fluid communication with the inlet manifold and the second first medium channel end is in fluid communication with the outlet manifold.
12. The heat exchanger of any claim 10, further comprising: a second fluid inlet in fluid communication with the first second medium channel end and a second fluid outlet in fluid communication with the second second medium channel end.
13. The heat exchanger of claim 10, being a cross-flow heat exchanger.
14. The heat exchanger of claim 10, being a counter-flow heat exchanger.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0014] Examples according to the disclosure will now be described with reference to the drawings. It should be noted that these are examples only and that variations are possible within the scope of the claims.
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0023]
[0024] As is conventional, the heat exchanger 10 has a core 12 in the form of a block of channels for a first medium (e.g. hot air) and a second medium (e.g. cold air) arranged such that heat transfer takes place between the mediums where their channels contact each other. Some heat exchanger have a counter-flow design in which the channels of the first medium and the channels of the second medium are parallel but the first and second mediums flow in opposite directions. Other heat exchangers have a cross-flow design in which the channels of the first medium are directed across (perpendicular to) the channels of the second medium so that the first medium and the second medium flow across (perpendicular to) each other. The design shown in
[0025] The second medium enters the channels for the second medium, which, in this example, are formed in the core 12 across the plane of the channels for the first medium. The second medium enters these channels at a second medium inlet 15, flows through the channels for the second medium, across the channels through which the first medium flow, thus exchanging heat with the first medium, and exits the core at the second medium outlet 25. At the respective outlet, the medium that is colder at the inlet has become warmer, and the medium that is warmer at the inlet has become cooler.
[0026] In order to provide improved heat transfer properties, and since additive manufacturing techniques have made it possible to easily manufacture different shapes of channels, many heat exchanger cores have wavy or woven channels rather than straight channels. A wavy channel improves heat transfer properties by creating turbulence as the medium flows through the channel, and can also increase the heat transfer area for a given length of channel. In such weave core designs, the hot medium and cold medium channels are interwoven in a cross-flow configuration.
[0027] In applications where heat exchangers are used in high temperature conditions, and where the temperature difference between the first and second medium is large, thermal stresses at points of high temperature difference can result in thermal inefficiencies and even damage to the heat exchanger. There is a desire to provide a heat exchanger core design where such stresses can be reduced.
[0028] The heat exchanger core design according to this disclosure reduces stresses at temperature difference interfaces by modifying the shape of channels through which one or both of the first and second medium flow, at locations along their length e.g. at their inlets and/or outlets and/or at other points between their inlet and outlet ends such that the channels have one or more locations where the channel transitions to have a shape (cross-sectional shape) that is different from the shape at other locations along the length.
[0029] This will be described further, by way of example, with reference to
[0030]
[0031] In the example shown, the heat exchanger core 12 comprises a set of first medium channels 100 arranged for flow of a first medium from a first end 110 to a second, opposite end 112 (not shown in
[0032] Particularly in high temperature conditions, as mentioned above, especially during heating or cooling, high thermal stresses occur e.g. in the region of the channel inlets and outlets and the manifolds where they interface with the core. To reduce the thermal stresses due to the large temperature difference occurring in such heat exchangers, the channels, according to this disclosure, have one or more portions along their length that is morphed to a different cross-sectional shape compared to other portions of the channel. One example of this, where the shape of the channels is morphed at the first medium inlet 16, can best be seen in
[0033] The effect of the morphing of the channel at one portion (here the inlet end) can be seen by comparing
[0034] An example of a channel in which a portion (here the end) is morphed to have a different shape is seen in
[0035] The morphing is a geometrical transition from one shape to another. The actual overall cross-sectional area of the channel, however, does not change substantially from the non-morphed portion to the morphed portion and so the shape change will not have a significant impact on pressure drop.
[0036] The design of the channels according to this disclosure allows thermal stresses at temperature interfaces e.g. between the core and the manifolds to be reduced making the heat exchanger more resistant to stress and the core more resistant to low cycle fatigue, LCF. It has been found that by providing a morphed portion in the channel, the stress of the whole core is reduced.