Cooling conduit
09825342 · 2017-11-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01M10/6556
ELECTRICITY
Y02E60/10
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
H01M10/617
ELECTRICITY
H01M2220/20
ELECTRICITY
H01M10/6566
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01M10/617
ELECTRICITY
H01M10/6566
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A conduit for cooling a heating element includes an inlet mouth for entry of a fresh air flow, a plurality of cooling channels, the fresh air flow dividing between the channels into a plurality of air flows to collect heat produced by the heating element, an outlet mouth for an exit of a heated air flow, the heated air flow resulting from a merger of the plurality of air flows after the heat collection, and air deflectors in the outlet mouth facing the channel outlets situated closest to an exit opening of the outlet mouth relative to the other channel outlets to prevent at least one of the plurality of air flows from exiting the cooling channels. The air deflectors extend over lengths which reduce as distances from the opening of the outlet mouth increase to guide the air flows towards the exit opening of the outlet mouth.
Claims
1. A conduit for cooling a heating element, the conduit comprising: an inlet mouth for an entry of a fresh air flow; a plurality of cooling channels that divide the fresh air flow into a plurality of air flows to collect heat produced by the heating element, the plurality of cooling channels including a first cooling channel, a second cooling channel, and a third cooling channel; an outlet mouth that receives a heated air flow from each of the plurality of cooling channels, the heated air flow resulting from a merger of the plurality of air flows after collection of the heat; a first air deflector extending from an outlet of the first cooling channel into the outlet mouth and a second air deflector extending from an outlet of the second cooling channel into the outlet mouth; wherein the first cooling channel is closer to an exit opening of the outlet mouth than the second cooling channel and the second cooling channel is closer to the exit opening of the outlet mouth than the third cooling channel, wherein the third cooling channel does not include an air deflector extending from an outlet of the third cooling channel, and wherein the first air deflector and the second air deflector are positioned to prevent an exit of the heated air flows from the first cooling channel and the second cooling channel, said first air deflector having a length that is greater than a length of the second air deflector so as to guide said air flows towards the exit opening of the outlet mouth.
2. The cooling conduit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the first air deflector and the second air deflector are curved to prevent the exit of the heated air flows from the first cooling channel and the second cooling channel.
3. The cooling conduit as claimed in claim 2, wherein a radius of curvature of the first air deflector is greater than a radius of curvature of the second air deflector.
4. A battery pack comprising: a plurality of electrochemical energy storage cells constituting a heating element; and the cooling conduit as claimed in claim 1 to cool the plurality of cells.
5. The cooling conduit as claimed in claim 1, further comprising: a fourth cooling channel positioned further from the exit opening of the outlet mouth than the third cooling channel, and the fourth cooling channel does not include an air deflector extending from an outlet of the fourth cooling channel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will appear from the description which follows, given in relation to the attached drawings which show:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(6) Thus in the example of
(7) According to the invention, curved deflectors 17 and 18 are arranged in the outlet mouth 12 facing the exit opening of channels 13 and 14 respectively. The curved deflectors 17 and 18 have the primary function of promoting the passage of air through channels 15 and 16 to the detriment of channels 13 and 14, while preventing the exit of air flows f1 and f2 from channels 13 and 14 respectively. In fact, by preventing the exit of air flows f1 and f2 from channels 13 and 14 respectively, the deflectors 17 and 18 create an over-pressure in channels 13 and 14, the consequence of which is that the air forming the inlet flow FE becomes oriented preferentially towards channels 15 and 16 where the pressure is lower. The curved deflectors 17 and 18 also have the function, once flows f1 and f2 have exited from channels 13 and 14 respectively “by force”, of guiding said flows to the exit opening of the mouth 12, in order to limit their effect on the pressure rise in the outlet mouth 12 since this pressure rise prevents the free exit of flows f4 and f3 in the mouth 12 and hence increases the pressure in channels 15 and 16.
(8) Thus a principle of the invention is to promote the passage of fresh air in the channels furthest away from the inlet opening of the mouth 11. Thus initially the passage of air is promoted in channels 16 and 15 to the detriment of the passage of air in channels 13 and 14 by arranging deflectors at the outlet of channels 13 and 14, namely deflectors 17 and 18 respectively, but not at the outlet of channels 15 and 16. Secondly, the passage of air is promoted in channel 14 to the detriment of the passage of air in channel 13, the deflector 17 arranged at the outlet of channel 13 being longer and having a greater radius of curvature than deflector 18 arranged at the outlet of channel 14. In fact, since the deflector 17 is longer and its radius of curvature greater, it produces a greater “plug” effect than the deflector 18 and hence creates a greater over-pressure in channel 13 than in channel 14, and hence the air from the inlet flow FE which has not entered either channel 16 or channel 15 becomes oriented preferentially toward channel 14 rather than toward channel 13. It is therefore firstly the presence or absence of the deflector at the outlet of a channel, then secondly the geometry of the deflectors which determine the order of preference amongst channels 13 to 16. The deflectors form, with direction Y taken by flows f1, f2, f3 and f4 in channels 13 to 16 respectively, an angle of less than 90° (a theoretical angle which corresponds to total closure of channels 13 to 16) and greater than 0° (a theoretical angle which corresponds to total opening of channels 13 to 16). The radius of curvature and the length of the deflectors depend in each case in particular on the space available in the conduit.
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