GAS HEATER
20230152006 · 2023-05-18
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24H2250/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H3/0405
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H15/37
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H9/1863
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H15/25
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F24H3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H9/1863
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H15/25
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
One aspect of the invention provides a gas heater including: a structure that defines a gas flow path having an upstream portion and a downstream portion; a first heating element positioned at least partially in the upstream portion of the flow path and having a first heating element maximum temperature capability; and a second heating element positioned downstream of the first heating element in the downstream portion of the flow path. The second heating element has a resistance that varies with temperature according to a second-heating-element-temperature-dependent resistivity rate.
Claims
1. A gas heater comprising: a structure that defines a gas flow path having an upstream portion and a downstream portion; a first heating element positioned at least partially in the upstream portion of the flow path and having a first heating element maximum temperature capability; and a second heating element positioned downstream of the first heating element in the downstream portion of the flow path, the second heating element having a resistance that varies with temperature according to a second-heating-element-temperature-dependent resistivity rate.
2. The gas heater of claim 1, wherein the first heating element is made of a first material and the second heating element is made of a second material, the second material having a second heating element maximum temperature capability that is higher than the first heating element maximum temperature capability.
3. The gas heater of claim 2, wherein the first material includes an iron-chromium-aluminum alloy.
4. The gas heater of claim 3, wherein the second material includes molybdenum.
5. The gas heater of claim 3, wherein the second material includes tungsten.
6. The gas heater of claim 3, wherein the first heating element maximum temperature capability is approximately 1200 C.
7. A method of operating a gas heater, comprising: providing the gas heater according claim 1; providing a flow of gas along the upstream portion and downstream portion of the flow path; providing electric energy to the first heating element to heat gas on the gas flow path in the upstream portion; heating the second heating element to increase the resistivity of the second heating element; and providing electric energy to the second heating element to heat gas on the flow path in excess of the first heating element temperature limit.
8. The method of claim 7, where heating the second heating element comprises heating the second heating element with gas heated by the first heating element on the gas flow path in the upstream portion.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the first heating element is constructed of a first heating element material and the second heating element is constructed of a second heating element material, the second heating element material being different than the first heating element material.
10. The method of claim 7, wherein providing the flow of gas includes providing a flow of hydrogen gas.
11. The method of claim 7, wherein providing the flow of gas includes providing a flow of exclusively hydrogen gas.
12. The method of claim 7, wherein providing the flow of gas includes providing a flow of exclusively hydrogen gas and nitrogen gas.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0015] Turn now to
[0016] The housing can define a flow path for gas to be heated and at least partially encloses the heating elements to help direct heat to the gas. In the illustrative embodiment of
[0017] The heating element shown in
[0018] The heating elements can be arranged serially in an electrical circuit along with a controller and a lead that passes through an interior of the mandrel. The first heating element, positioned in an upstream portion of the housing, can be constructed of a resistive wire that has a substantially constant resistivity with respect to temperature. According to some embodiments, the resistive wire of the first element is made of a ferritic iron-chromium-aluminum alloy, such as KANTHAL® that may be sourced from Kanthal Heating Technology of Amherst, N.Y. In another embodiment, the resistive wire can be nickel-chromium. In one embodiment, a wire can be considered to have substantially constant resistivity with respect to temperature if the resistance varies less than 5% (e.g., about 4% or about 3%) between room temperature (e.g., 20 C) and the operating temperature of the first heating element.
[0019] In some embodiments, the first heating element includes two sub-stages of the same material, but having two different gauges. For example, the first sub-stage can have a finer gauge that has a higher resistance than a downstream sub-stage having a coarser gauge.
[0020] The second heating element can be constructed of a refractory resistive wire having a resistivity that increases with temperature, such as tungsten, molybdenum, tantalum, alloys thereof, and the like. In some embodiments, the second heating element is formed from a ceramic-like wire alternative such as molybdenum disilicide and the like.
[0021] The gauges of both the first and the second heating element can be optimized to accommodate various electrical voltages. Further, the heating elements can be solid or stranded.
[0022] The heating elements can be wound about the central mandrel in a manner calculated to increase or maximize thermal density, mass, and/or surface area of the heating elements exposed to the gas contained in the housing. For example, the wire of the heating elements can be wound substantially helically with respective to the central mandrel. The heating elements can also have serpentine loops along the helical path that radiate inward and outward with respect to a central axis. The serpentine loops can arranged in an axially helically pattern.
[0023] In some embodiments, an axial gap is formed between the resistive heating elements, which can prevent or limit upstream migration of heat from the second heating element that could damage the first heating element. In some cases, the gas flow may also limit upstream migration of thermal dispersion to the first heating element.
[0024] Adjacent heating elements (e.g., first and second elements) can be joined by welding, e.g., TIG welding (with or without a filler material), percussive welding, and the like.
[0025] Multiple heaters (e.g., 16) can be used in parallel to heat a desired volume of gas.
Control
[0026] Temperature measurement sensors may be positioned at various points of the gas heater to measure operating temperatures. Measured temperatures may be used by the controller or merely for reference. Infrared sensors may also be used, particularly for temperatures that exceed 1200 C, such as wire temperatures of the heating elements or the gas at the outlet of the heater.
[0027] The principles of how to use feedback (e.g., from a temperature sensor such as thermocouple, a thermistor, infrared and the like) in order to modulate operation of a component are described, for example, in Karl Johan Astrom & Richard M. Murray, Feedback Systems: An Introduction for Scientists & Engineers (2008) and can be implemented using a Proportional-Integral-Derivative (PID) controller and the like.
[0028] In some embodiments, a temperature sensor such as an infrared imaging device can be utilized to protect the heater against operation at temperatures over specification that may damage the heater (e.g., the first resistive heater(s)). Such a condition may be caused by an interruption of flow of the gas to be heated, which acts as a heat sink relative to the resistive-heating elements. Such an over-heat-prevention system is described in U.S. Pat. No. 10,736,180.
[0029] In some embodiments, a current detector can be coupled to a portion of the second heating element. The current detector can identify the amount of current reaching that particular coupling point to the second heating element. Based on the dimensions (length, volume, and the like) of the second heating element and the detected current (and the current inputted into the system), the current detector can determine the resistivity of the second heating element at a given time. This may be advantageous, particularly as an indirect measurement of temperature of the system, and/or for detecting operating errors of the system.
[0030] The control system can be a computing device such as a microcontroller (e.g., available under the ARDUINO® or IOIO™ trademarks), general-purpose computer (e.g., a personal computer or PC), workstation, mainframe computer system, and so forth. The control system (“control unit”) can include a processor device (e.g., a central processing unit or “CPU”), a memory device, a storage device, a user interface, a system bus, and a communication interface.
Mechanism of Action
[0031] In operation, a flow of gas to be heated is first passed along the flow path of the enclosure. Electric current is passed through the first resistive heating element to heat the gas that passes therethrough. The heated gas, in turn, heats the second heating element thereby causing the variable resistance value of the second heating element to increase. Heat is also generated by second heating element, once its temperature and resistivity have increased to a point that enables the production of thermal energy.
Optional Independent Control of Heating Elements
[0032] Although embodiments of the invention leverage the substantially constant resistance of the first heating element to prevent current inrush to the variably resistive second heating element, embodiments of the invention could wire the different types of resistive heating elements on separate circuits. In such an embodiment, a controller could monitor a temperature within the heater and delay actuation of the variably resistive heating element until the variably resistive heating element reaches a desired temperature at which a desired resistance is provided. Similarly, if a fault is detected that causes the temperature of the variably resistive heating element to drop, the controller can be programmed to immediately suspend current to at least the variably resistive heating element.
Optional Non-Resistive Heating of Variably Resistive Heating Element
[0033] Although embodiments of the invention leverage the substantially constant resistance of the first heating element to prevent inrush to the variably resistive second heating element, embodiments of the invention could omit the first heating element and utilize a different heating source (e.g., combustion) to heat a variably resistive heating element to a sufficient temperature to achieve the desired resistance before current is applied.