Cryogenic pumps
09599101 ยท 2017-03-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F04B37/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F17C9/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B15/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A cryogenic pump has an associated heater for vaporizing cryogenic fluid. The heater has a chamber (bounded by an inner sleeve and an outer sleeve) disposed around at least a portion of the pump housing. The heater has a helical heating coil with a plurality of turns disposed within the chamber and a helical baffle having a plurality of turns interspaced with the turns of the heating coil for guiding heat exchange fluid over the turns of the heat exchange coil. The heater has an inlet for cryogenic fluid to communicate with the heat exchange coil and an outlet for the resulting vaporized fluid. Heat exchange fluid flows through an inlet of the heater chamber to an outlet of the heater chamber and then through a space defined between the inner sleeve and a portion of the pump housing.
Claims
1. A cryogenic pump for pumping a cryogenic fluid has associated therewith a heater for vaporizing the cryogenic fluid, the heater comprising: (a) a heater chamber bounded by an inner sleeve and an outer sleeve and disposed around at least a portion of a pump housing enclosing a piston shaft; (b) a helical heat exchange coil having a plurality of turns disposed within said heater chamber; (c) an inlet with cryogenic fluid communicating with said heat exchange coil; (d) an outlet for resulting vaporized fluid communicating with said heat exchange coil; (e) an inlet to said heater chamber for a heat exchange fluid; and (f) an outlet from said heater chamber for said heat exchange fluid to flow out from said heater chamber to a space defined between said inner sleeve and said portion of said pump housing; wherein said heater chamber has a helical baffle having a plurality of turns for guiding said heat exchange fluid over said turns of said heat exchange coil, said turns of said baffle being interspaced with said turns of said heat exchange coil.
2. The cryogenic pump of claim 1, wherein said baffle is integral with said inner sleeve or said outer sleeve.
3. The cryogenic pump of claim 1, further comprising a piston operable to discharge cryogenic fluid from a pumping chamber within said pump housing.
4. The cryogenic pump of claim 3, wherein said pump housing is of generally elongate, cylindrical configuration.
5. The cryogenic pump of claim 3, wherein said pumping chamber has an outlet port communicating with one end of a conduit for conducting said cryogenic fluid to said heat exchange coil, the other end of said conduit communicating with said inlet to said heat exchange coil.
6. The cryogenic pump of claim 1, wherein said heat exchange coil is provided with at least one of external ribs, internal ribs and fins to facilitate heat exchange.
7. The cryogenic pump of claim 1, wherein said outlet from said heater chamber for said heat exchange fluid is formed in said inner sleeve.
8. The cryogenic pump of claim 7, wherein said outlet from said heater chamber for said heat exchange fluid is an aperture.
9. The cryogenic pump of claim 1, further comprising an outlet to said heater located proximate said inlet to said heater chamber for withdrawing said heat exchange fluid from said space.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) A cryogenic pump according to the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
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(7) The drawings are not to scale.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT(S)
(8) Referring to the drawings, there is shown generally a cryogenic pump 2 of the kind having a cold end 3 adapted to be immersed in a volume of cryogenic liquid, not shown, to be supplied to, for example, a combustion engine. Pump 2 is generally of the same kind as that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,293,418, except that it does not include an accumulator. Instead, pump 2 has a pumping chamber communicating directly with a vaporizer or like heater. The disclosure of U.S. Pat. No. 7,293,418 is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
(9) The cryogenic pump has a warm end 5 opposite a cold end 3. Warm end 5 is not intended for immersion in the cryogenic liquid. Pump 2 has a housing 4 of generally elongate configuration with an axial piston 6 and piston shaft 7. Piston 6 is able, in operation, to draw cryogenic liquid into, and force cryogenic liquid out of, a pumping chamber 8 defined within housing 4. Pumping chamber 8 has an inlet 9 for cryogenic liquid communicating with a hollow cylindrical cryogenic liquid intake member 11 typically fitted with a filter 11a effective to prevent small solid particles from entering the pump.
(10) Outlet port 10 houses a check valve 12. Outlet port 10 is connected to a relatively small diameter conduit 13 which extends from cold end 3 to warm end 5 of the pump. Conduit 13 terminates in an annular heater or heat exchange device 15, in which the cryogenic liquid is vaporized by indirect heat exchange with a relatively high temperature heat exchange fluid. If, for example, the cryogenic liquid is LNG and pump 2 is intended to supply the natural gas to an engine (not shown), the heat exchange fluid can be an aqueous fluid that is used to cool the engine. Typically, cryogenic pump 2 raises the pressure of the cryogenic liquid to above its critical pressure, so that strictly speaking it becomes a supercritical fluid rather than a liquid in heater 15. Heater 15 is provided with an outlet 99 (see
(11) At warm end 5 of pump 2, there is provided a drive chamber 23 for piston 6. Typically, a hydraulic drive is employed with there being an inlet port 25 and an outlet port 17 for hydraulic fluid, but an electrical, pneumatic, or mechanical drive could alternatively be used. The drive arrangements can in general be similar to those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,293,418 for the pump described and shown therein. Piston 6 has two strokes. In its upward stroke (that is, in its stroke away from cold end 3, a flow of cryogenic liquid through inlet 9 is induced. In its downward stroke (that is its stroke away from warm end 5) a flow of cryogenic liquid through the outlet port is provided. Pump 2 is capable of generating a high delivery pressure typically in the order of 300 bar or higher. In one example, pump 2 delivers cryogenic liquid at a pressure of 320 bar and a temperature of 162 C., the cryogenic liquid being LNG.
(12) The configuration of heater 15 is shown in more detail in
(13) Heater 15 is provided with a distribution chamber 114, bounded in part by second flange 108, for a heating fluid, typically an aqueous liquid employed in the cooling of an internal combustion engine to which the natural gas is supplied as a fuel. Distribution chamber 114 has an inlet port 19 (see
(14) The heating liquid is discharged from chamber 100 through apertures 118 into an annular space 121 defined between inner sleeve 102 and a portion of pump housing 4. The heating liquid can be withdrawn from this space via port 21 with the assistance of a water pump (not shown) which is associated with the engine (not shown) to which the natural gas is supplied as fuel.
(15) While particular elements, embodiments and applications of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be understood, that the invention is not limited thereto since modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present disclosure, particularly in light of the foregoing teachings.