Heat exchanger with dummy tubes
20170328637 · 2017-11-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
F28D1/0443
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/0202
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D2021/0094
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F1/126
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D1/05325
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/0209
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F28D1/053
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F9/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Heat exchanger comprising a pair of headers and a plurality of parallel and coplanar tubes interconnecting the headers, wherein each header comprises a header plate provided with a plurality of slots, in each of which an end of a respective tube is fitted, and wherein the heat exchanger is configured to prevent fluid from flowing into at least one tube, hereinafter dummy tube, arranged at a boundary between functionally different sections of the heat exchanger. The slot of the header plate which receives the end of the respective dummy tube is formed as a blind recess in the header plate.
Claims
1. A heat exchanger comprising a pair of headers and a plurality of parallel and coplanar tubes interconnecting the headers, wherein each header comprises a header plate provided with a plurality of slots, in each of which an end of a respective tube is fitted, and wherein the heat exchanger is configured to prevent fluid from flowing into at least one tube, hereinafter dummy tube, arranged at a boundary between functionally different sections of the heat exchanger, wherein the slot of the header plate which receives the end of the respective dummy tube is formed as a blind recess on the header plate, the end of the respective dummy tube being closed by an integral portion of the header plate.
2. A method for manufacturing a header plate for a heat exchanger as claimed in claim 1, comprising the following steps: subjecting a plate to a forming operation so as to produce a plurality of deformed areas on the plate, each of which defines a blind recess, and subjecting the plate to a material removal operation so as to produce through-apertures in the deformed areas of the plate, the deformed areas which have the through-apertures constituting the slots intended to receive the ends of respective tubes of the heat exchanger, wherein the material removal operation in one or more of the deformed areas which constitute the slots intended to receive the ends of respective dummy tubes is omitted.
3. The method as claimed in claim 2, wherein said forming operation comprises a deep-drawing operation.
4. The method as claimed in claim 2, wherein said material removal operation comprises a punching operation.
Description
[0015] Further characteristic features and advantages of the invention will become clearer from the following detailed description of an embodiment of the invention, provided with reference to the accompanying drawings which are provided purely by way of a non-limiting example and in which:
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019] With reference to
[0020] The heat exchanger 1 comprises a pair of headers 10, 20 and a plurality of parallel and co-planar tubes 30, 30′ which interconnect the headers 10, 20. Fins 40 are arranged between adjacent tubes 30, 30′.
[0021] With reference to
[0022] A plurality of slots 50, 50′ is formed in each header plate 11, 21, one end of a respective tube 30 30′ being inserted in each of said slots. Each tube end is joined to either plate by means of a material connection, for example braze-welding, at each slot.
[0023] In the example shown, the heat exchanger 1 is an exchanger which has a U flow of the heat exchange fluid. One of the headers, denoted by 10 in
[0024] Inside the heat exchanger 1, therefore, two functionally different sections are identified: an outward section and a return section for the heat exchange fluid. The broken line B in
[0025] According to another embodiment of the invention (shown in
[0026] The heat exchanger 1 is configured to prevent the flow of fluid inside at least one tube, indicated by 30′ in the figures, arranged in the region of the boundary B between functionally different sections of the heat exchanger 1. The tubes in which the conveying of heat exchange fluid is prevented are known in the sector as dummy tubes and allow the thermal zones of the heat exchanger to be kept separate, preventing any mutual thermal influence and thus improving the performance features of the heat exchanger.
[0027] In the heat exchanger described above, the dummy tubes 30′ are entirely identical to the other tubes 30 which form the plurality of parallel and coplanar tubes of the heat exchanger. The flow of the heat exchange fluid to the dummy tubes 30′ is prevented by the fact that, in the header plates 11, 21, each slot, indicated by 50′, which receives the end of the respective dummy tube 30′ is formed as a blind recess in the header plate 11, 21, differently from the other slots, indicated by 50, which are formed as through-apertures. The end of the dummy tube 30′ is therefore closed by an integral portion of the header plate, in other words a portion, in particular a deformed portion, which forms part of the same plate part.
[0028] The configuration described above may be produced industrially in an extremely simple and low-cost manner.
[0029] In fact, in order to manufacture the header plates 11, 21, a plate conventionally undergoes a forming operation, in particular a deep-drawing operation, in order to form a plurality of deformed areas on the plate, each of which defines a blind recess.
[0030] The plate is then subjected to a material removal operation, in particular a punching operation, in order to form through-apertures in the deformed areas of the plate, the deformed areas provided with the through-apertures forming the slots 50 intended to receive the ends of respective tubes 30 of the heat exchanger.
[0031] In order to realize the configuration of dummy tubes described above it is merely required to omit the material removal operation in one or more of the deformed areas which form the slots 50′ intended to receive the ends of respective dummy tubes 30′.
[0032] To this end it is sufficient to modify or program the machine intended for the material removal (punching) operation such that it does not carry out the material removal operation in the deformed areas intended to form the blind-recess slots 50′. A same machine may therefore be adapted in an extremely simple manner to different header-plate configurations.
[0033] The dedicated moulds for forming the internal partitions in the header are therefore not needed, these being instead required in the known solutions and, among other things, being normally suitable only for a few types of header.
[0034] Moreover, as can be seen in the example shown, dummy tubes may also be provided in U-flow heat exchangers, something which would not be possible if separating partitions are arranged inside the recirculation header.
[0035] Moreover as can be seen, the present invention does not require the use of tubes of smaller length tubes for manufacture of the dummy tubes and therefore allows tubes all with the same length to be used. This aspect is particularly desirable with a view to automatic assembly of the heat exchanger.