Thermal energy system and method
12618344 ยท 2026-05-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A thermal energy method for converting thermal to mechanical energy is disclosed. The method comprises circulating liquid and vapor phases of a working fluid in a closed loop comprising a recipient arranged at a lower part and a tube system comprising a rising part, a condenser section of a descending part and a hydrostatic pressure section of a descending part. A corresponding system is also disclosed.
Claims
1. A thermal energy method for converting thermal to mechanical energy, the method comprising: circulating liquid and vapor phases of a working fluid in a closed loop comprising a recipient constituting a variable volume within a fixed enclosing volume, arranged at a lower part and a tube system comprising a rising part, a descending part with a condenser section and with a hydrostatic pressure section, wherein the circulating comprises: heating the working fluid in the recipient providing working vapor, and compensating for thermal energy loss due to vaporization; condensing the working vapor in the condenser section providing condensed liquid phase working fluid, and setting up a pressure differential contributing to lifting the working vapor in the rising part; collecting the condensed working fluid in the hydrostatic pressure section providing a hydrostatic pressure head; extracting mechanical energy based on the hydrostatic pressure head wherein extracting mechanical energy contributes to expanding the variable volume; and returning the collected condensed working fluid to the recipient.
2. The thermal energy method according to claim 1, wherein the heating of the working fluid in the recipient is arranged for maintaining a set temperature of the working fluid.
3. The thermal energy method according to claim 2, wherein the set temperature is less than 50 C.
4. The thermal energy method according to claim 1, further comprising heating the working vapor in the rising part avoiding condensation.
5. The thermal energy method according to claim 1, wherein the condensing comprises exposing the working vapor to cooling surfaces in the condenser section, wherein the temperature of the cooling surfaces is below local dew point.
6. The thermal energy method according to claim 1, comprising initially filling the closed loop with one or more non-condensing gases at a set pressure prior to introducing the working fluid.
7. The thermal energy method according to claim 1, comprising: initially purging non-condensing gases from the closed loop.
8. The thermal energy method according to claim 7, wherein the initial purging comprises evacuation, prior to introducing the working fluid.
9. The thermal energy method according to claim 1, wherein the method further comprises: generating electrical energy by one of, a turbine or a piston engine arranged to be driven by the hydrostatic pressure head.
10. The thermal energy method according to claim 1, wherein the working fluid comprises at least one of the following, alone or in a mixture: water, carbon dioxide, ammonia, a Freon compound, a hydrocarbon, a halogenated hydrocarbon, tetrafluoroethane, and pentafluoropropane.
11. The thermal energy method according to claim 1, comprising the following: accumulating, including, heating, transporting, and collecting, wherein collecting comprises temporarily keeping the condensed working fluid in the hydrostatic pressure section, contributing to reducing the volume of, thus shrinking, the recipient; a hydropower generating including generating electrical energy by passing water through a turbine and into the enclosing volume vacated by the shrinking of the recipient, wherein hydrostatic pressure in the water exceeds vapor pressure in the closed loop, and provides pressure head for the turbine; and regenerating, wherein extracting mechanical energy and returning comprise allowing the working liquid in the hydrostatic pressure section expanding the variable recipient volume and forcing liquid out of the enclosing volume.
12. A thermal energy system comprising: a closed loop comprising a recipient constituting a variable volume within a fixed enclosing volume arranged at a lower part and a tube system comprising a rising part, and a descending part with a condenser section and with a hydrostatic pressure section; means for heating a working fluid in the recipient providing working vapor and compensating for thermal energy loss due to vaporization; means for condensing the working vapor in the condenser section providing condensed liquid phase working fluid, and setting up a pressure differential contributing to lifting the working vapor in the rising part; means for collecting condensed working fluid in the hydrostatic pressure section providing a hydrostatic pressure head; means for extracting mechanical energy based on the hydrostatic pressure head wherein extracting mechanical energy contributes to expanding the variable volume; and means for returning the collected condensed working fluid to the recipient.
13. The thermal system according to claim 12, further comprising means for heating the working vapor in the rising part avoiding condensation.
14. The thermal energy system according to claim 12, wherein the means for extracting mechanical energy comprises one of, a turbine or a piston engine.
15. The thermal energy system according to claim 12, wherein the recipient volume comprises one of, an expandable bladder, bellows or a piston.
16. The thermal energy system according to claim 12, wherein the system comprises: means for temporarily keeping the condensed working fluid in the hydrostatic pressure section, contributing to reducing the volume of, thus shrinking, the recipient; a turbine arranged for generating electrical energy by allowing water passing through the turbine and into the enclosing volume vacated by the shrinking of the recipient, wherein hydrostatic pressure in the water exceeds vapor pressure in the closed loop, and provides pressure head for the turbine; and means for controllably allowing the working liquid in the hydrostatic pressure section expanding the recipient volume and forcing water out of the enclosing volume.
17. The thermal energy method according to claim 2, further comprising heating the working vapor in the rising part avoiding condensation.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) The above and other features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims and together with advantages thereof will become clearer from consideration of exemplary embodiments of the invention given with reference to the accompanying drawings.
(2) Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the following figures, wherein:
(3)
(4)
(5)
LIST OF REFERENCE NUMBERS IN THE FIGURES
(6) The following reference numbers refer to the drawings:
(7) Number Designation
(8) 1 Turbine 2 Body of water 3 Recipient 4 Column 5 Heat exchange elements 6 Dispersion devices 7 Riser tube 8 Top point 9 Condenser region 10 Collection tube 11 Cooling coil 12 Column top 13 Heating elements 14 Tailrace 15 Intake tube 16 Valve 17 Fixed enclosing volume 18 Valve 19 Recipient with variable volume 20 Working liquid 21 Vertical channel 22 Vertical channel 23 Valve 24 Valve 25 Condenser 26 Heating coil 27 Heating coil 28 Channel top point 29 Cooling coil
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
(9) The problem which is addressed by the present invention can be illustrated as follows: A hydroelectric turbine/generator system operates in a location where spent water from the turbine is collected in a limited recipient volume. When the recipient is full, the turbine stops. In many cases, the only available alternative for regenerating recipient space is to add energy to lift the water in the recipient to a higher level. An example of such a situation is shown in
(10) The basic idea of the present invention is to restore potential energy in the gravity field for spent working fluid, i.e. working fluid that has yielded potential energy by driving a mechanical energy extraction device (turbine, pump, etc). This is achieved by employing a phase transition protocol as follows: The spent working fluid is contained in the lower part of a closed loop where it is first converted to the vapor phase. A condenser in the upper part of the closed loop sets up a pressure differential in the vapor volume inside the closed loop, causing the vapor to be transported to a higher level in the gravity field where it is converted back to the liquid phase, ready for a new power cycle through the mechanical energy extraction device.
(11)
(12) The working fluid circulates in a closed loop where the working fluid is cyclically vaporized and condensed. In a steady state, the amount of fluid in the different aggregation states is constant, controlled by the amount of thermal energy transported into and out from the system. In order to maximize turbine power, the vapor pressure at the tailrace (14) should be minimized. Also, a low pressure above the liquid in the recipient (3) shall promote evaporation. However, these factors shall be dependent on the phase characteristics of the working fluid to be used and the temperatures available from the evaporation heat source and the condensation cooling system. This can be illustrated by the following examples:
(13) Example 1: Water as working fluid, with buffer gas at 1 bar. Referring to
(14) Example 2: Only working fluid, without buffer gas. In Example 1, the buffer gas pressure defines the lower floor of the boiling temperature T for water in the recipient (3), and the water vapor diffuses through the air in the vapor spaces, which shall slow down the overall process of transferring liquid from the recipient (3) and into the column (4). In the present example, the system in
(15) The system in
(16)
(17)
(18) Thus, the efficiency is in the vicinity of 10.sup.3. Even if recuperation of thermal energy is included in the condenser, the overall efficiency shall remain very low. However, by selecting a working fluid with suitable phase transition properties, the system may provide novel opportunities for energy extraction from heat sources that can deliver large amounts of thermal energy at low to moderate temperatures.
(19)
(20) As shown in
(21) The next step in the sequence is the hydropower generation step which is illustrated in
(22)
(23) A person skilled in the art shall recognize that there exist a number of equivalent techniques for performing the operations described in connection with