United States Patent |
4,393,663 |
Grunes , et al. |
July 19, 1983 |
Two-phase thermosyphon heater
Abstract
An apparatus for transferring heat from a heat source to a heat sink using a
vaporizable liquid wherein the vaporizable liquid is heated in an evaporator so
that some of the liquid vaporizes to propel the remaining heated liquid to a
condenser, where heat is transferred from the heated liquid to the condenser
predominantly by forced convection, and wherein the cooled liquid and condensed
vapor are returned to the evaporator for reheating, and further wherein a
restriction is disposed in the liquid/condensate return path to prevent vapor
from the evaporator from flowing to the condenser through the return path.
Inventors: |
Grunes; Howard E. (Santa Cruz, CA),
Morrison; Dennis J. (Santa Cruz, CA) |
Assignee: |
Gas Research Institute (Chicago, IL)
|
Appl. No.: |
06/253,817 |
Filed: |
April 13, 1981 |
Current U.S. Class: |
62/119 ; 165/104.21;
62/511 |
Current International Class:
|
F28D 15/02 (20060101); F25D
015/00 () |
Field of Search: |
62/119,511 165/104.21
|
References Cited [Referenced
By]
U.S. Patent Documents
Primary Examiner: Capossela;
Ronald C.
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Limbach, Limbach &
Sutton
Claims
What is claimed is:
1. Apparatus for transferring heat from a
heat source to a heat sink via a vaporizable liquid when the apparatus is
operating, the apparatus comprising
evaporator means at the heat source
for heating the vaporizable liquid so that a portion of the liquid is vaporized
to produce a moving stream of a heated liquid-vapor mixture;
condenser
means at the heat sink, the condenser means having a inlet and an outlet, the
inlet being communicatively coupled to the evaporator means for receiving the
heated mixture, and wherein the condenser means extracts both sensible and
latent heat from the heated mixture and condenses the vapor portion of the
mixture back into liquid form, and wherein the outlet is communicatively coupled
to the evaporator means for returning the cooled liquid and condensed vapor to
the evaporator for reheating;
supply means for communicatively coupling
the inlet of the condenser means to the evaporator means; and
return
means for communicatively coupling the outlet of the condenser means to the
evaporator means, the return means further including restriction means for
passing the cooled liquid and condensed vapor from the outlet of the condenser
means to the evaporator means while impeding the flow of vapor from the
evaporator means to the condenser means through the outlet of the condenser
means by way of the return means when the apparatus is operating.
2. The
heat transfer apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the condenser means are
positioned at a higher elevation than the evaporator means.
3. The heat
transfer apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the heat source is a gas
burner and the heat sink is a fluid storage and supply tank.
4. The heat
transfer apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the heat source is a an
electric heating coil and the heat sink is a fluid storage and supply tank.
5. The heat transfer apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the
vaporizable liquid mixture further includes a gas whose condensation temperature
is below the operating temperatures of the system.
6. The heat transfer
apparatus, as recited in claim 1, wherein the evaporator means comprise
a plurality of finned tubes, each tube having an opened first end and
second end, which are spaced apart and parallel to each other in a common plane,
the plane being generally parallel to the heat source;
a first header
having an inlet port and a plurality of coupling ports for communicatively
coupling the inlet port to the first end of each tube; and
a second
header having an outlet port and a plurality of coupling ports for
communicatively coupling the second end of each tube with the outlet port.
7. The heat transfer apparatus, as recited in claim 1, wherein the
condenser means comprise a hair-pin shaped, finned, tubular member, having an
upper leg and a lower leg, the end of each leg being open, the tubular member
being disposed within the heat sink so that a free standing liquid will flow
from the upper leg opening, through the upper leg, into the lower leg, and
finally out of the lower leg opening.
8. The heat transfer apparatus, as
recited in claim 1, including a return means for coupling the outlet of the
condenser means to the evaporator means, the return means having a predetermined
inner diameter, wherein the restriction means include a structure shaped for
insertion into the return means and having an orifice, the orifice having a
predetermined diameter, so that fluid flow through the return means is
determined by the orifice diameter.
9. The heat transfer apparatus, as
recited in claim 1, including a return means for coupling the outlet of the
condenser to the evaporator, the return means having a predetermined
cross-sectional area and wherein the restriction means are coupled within the
return means and comprise a tube having a cross-sectional area which is smaller
than the cross-sectional area of the return means.
10. Apparatus for
heat transfer between a heat source and a water storage tank by way of a
vaporizable liquid, comprising,
a finned hair-pin shaped, tubular
condenser having an upper leg and a lower leg, the condenser mounted within the
storage tank with the upper leg disposed above the lower leg and so that both
legs protrude through the storage tank wall to the exterior of the tank, the
condenser being mounted to the storage tank so that both legs are sloped to
permit liquid flow from the upper leg through the lower leg;
a
multiple-tube evaporator suspended above the heat source and below the
condenser;
a supply pipe communicatively coupled to the multiple-tube
evaporator so that the supply pipe rises vertically from the evaporator and then
slopes upward toward the condenser before communicatively coupling with the
upper leg of the condenser;
a return pipe communicatively coupled to the
lower leg of the condenser and to the evaporator; and
a restriction
disposed within the return pipe for regulating the flow of liquid and
restricting the flow of vapor through the return pipe;
wherein the
vaporizable liquid is heated in the multiple tube evaporator so that a portion
of the liquid is vaporized to generate a high velocity vapor and further wherein
the remaining unvaporized liquid is entrained by the vapor to form a heated
liquid-vapor mixture which exits from the evaporator and is propelled by the
vapor pressure through the supply pipe into the tubular condenser where the
vapor is condensed to liquid and the mixture is cooled, the cooled liquid then
flowing out of the lower leg of the condenser and into the return pipe for
return to the multiple-type evaporator.
11. The heat transfer apparatus,
as recited in claim 1, further wherein the evaporator means and the heat source
are disposed in a well-insulated combustion chamber.
12. A method of
transferring heat from a heat source to a heat sink, comprising the steps of
heating a vaporizable liquid in an evaporator with the heat source so
that some of the liquid is vaporized to generate high velocity vapor which
entrains the remaining unvaporized liquid and provides vapor pressure to propel
the heated mixture of vapor and liquid from the evaporator to a condenser;
cooling the heated liquid and vapor in the condenser by transferring
heat from the liquid and vapor to the heat sink;
returning the cooled
liquid and condensed vapor through a return pipe for further heating by the heat
source; and
providing a restriction means for creating a back-pressure
in the return pipe to restrict the flow of vapor from the evaporator through the
return pipe to the condenser.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed,
generally, to heat transfer apparatus and, in particular, to a two-phase
thermosyphon heat transfer apparatus.
In the past, heat pipe apparatus
have been disclosed wherein the heat transfer fluid takes on two different
phases, a vapor phase and a liquid phase. Heat transfer is accomplished using
the latent heat carried by the vapor phase of the heat transfer liquid, while
the liquid phase of the heat transfer liquid is utilized primarily as a means
for returning the condensed vapor to the heat source. Typical of these efforts
is Lazaridis, U.S. Pat. No. 3,854,454. In Lazaridis, water is heated to form a
vapor, which then rises into a condenser chamber. The heated water vapor
condenses on the walls of the condenser chamber thereby transferring heat from
the vapor to the walls of the condenser chamber. The condenser chamber is
positioned so that the condensed water is induced by gravity or a wick to flow
back to the heat source portion of the heat pipe. In Lazaridis, the heat pipe is
an L-shaped member with the horizontal portion being the heat source area, and
the vertical portion being the condenser chamber. The heated water vapor rises
from the horizontal leg and up into the condenser chamber. The cooled condensate
flows down along the walls of the condenser chamber and back into the heat
source area.
It is popularly believed that heat transfer in a heat pipe
of this type is most efficient when heat is transferred by way of a
vapor-to-liquid phase change heat transfer. In the present invention it has been
discovered that heat transfer performance as high as, or better than, the
apparatus of the prior art can be achieved without using the vapor-to-liquid
heat transfer mechanism as the only heat transfer mechanism.
One
significant drawback to using a single conduit vapor-to-liquid phase change
technique as above is that condensed liquid returning to the evaporator section
can be entrained by vapor flowing in the opposite direction. This can cause the
evaporator to dry out and prevent effective heat transfer. To avoid this, vapor
velocities must be kept low which, in turn, requires large diameter conduits.
Another drawback is that the condensed liquid which flows down the sides
of the condenser chamber acts as a barrier between the heated vapor and the
cooler wall of the condenser chamber. This layer of condensate has a thermal
conductivity which is significantly lower than that for the wall of the
condenser chamber. As such, the efficiency of the heat transfer between the
vapor and the condenser chamber wall is reduced by the presence of the thick
condensate layer.
Pumped-liquid loops have also often been used to
transfer heat from a heat source to a heat sink, as in "side arm" domestic water
heaters. These require the added expense of a pump and, in the presence of hard
water, lead to scale formation on internal surfaces. Heat leaks can be
significant when the device is turned off, and, upon turning off, significant
amounts of heat can also be lost due to the cooling of the pump, the heat source
components, and the liquid contained in the heat source components.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The foregoing and other problems of
prior art heat transfer apparatus are overcome by the present apparatus for
transferring heat from a heat source to a heat sink using a vaporizable liquid,
the apparatus including evaporator means which are located at the heat source
for heating the vaporizable liquid to produce a moving stream of a heated
liquid-vapor mixture. Condenser means which have an inlet and an outlet are
located at the heat sink. The inlet of the condenser means is communicatively
coupled to the evaporator means for receiving the heated liquid-vapor mixture.
The condenser means extract both sensible and latent heat from the heated
mixture and condense the vapor portion of the mixture. The outlet of the
condenser means is communicatively coupled to the evaporator means for returning
the liquid mixture to the evaporator for reheating. Included within the
condenser means are means for restricting the flow of the vapor for passing from
the evaporator means through the outlet of the condenser to the condenser means.
In the present invention the predominant heat transfer mechanism is
heated-liquid forced convection, with such mechanisms as "pool boiling" and
"film condensation" playing a lesser role. High velocity vapor provides the
pumping mechanism by which the heated liquid-vapor mixture is pumped from the
evaporator and into the condenser to provide for forced convection heat transfer
between the heated liquid and the condenser. Since vapor and liquid move
together in the same direction, entrainment of liquid does not prevent
condensate from returning to the evaporator. To the contrary, entrainment is, in
fact, the mechanism by which the heated liquid is propelled to the condenser.
Entrainment caused by high vapor velocities is beneficial since it enhances the
thermosyphon pumping mechanism by delivering liquid to the condenser. A column
of many inches of condensate can be established in the condensate return line
providing the pumping head to power the flow mechanism and to produce the
high-vapor velocities. Hence, small-flow conduits can be used for high
heat-transfer rates. When heated liquid is used as the heat transfer medium as
in the present invention, the problem of a thick barrier layer of condensate is
thereby reduced. The flow of heated liquid over the condenser walls causes any
cooler liquid layer adjacent to the walls of the condenser to mix with the
heated liquid thereby reducing greatly the thermal resistance of the condensate
layer.
When the apparatus is turned off, the condensate drains fully
into the evaporator. Hence, one has a thermodiode similar to a heat pipe with
gravity condensate return in which the heat transfer performance is very high in
one direction, but heat losses are negligible in the opposite direction. Since
no pump is used, and the amount of vaporizable liquid used is very small, very
little heat is lost when the device is turned off and the parts close to the
heat source are allowed to cool.
It is therefore an object of the
present invention to provide an apparatus for transferring heat from a heat
source to a heat sink wherein the heat transfer to the heat sink is by forced
convection from a heated liquid and further wherein heated vapor serves as a
pump to circulate the heated liquid through the apparatus and contributes to
heat transfer through vapor-to-liquid phase change.
It is a further
object of the present invention to provide an apparatus for transferring heat
from a heat source to a heat sink wherein a condenser and an evaporator are
connected in a loop so that heated liquid is pumped by high velocity vapor, from
the evaporator to the condenser, through the supply leg of the loop and cooled
liquid and condensed vapor are returned from the condenser to the evaporator by
gravity, or other means, in the return leg of the loop.
It is a still
further object of the present invention to provide an apparatus for transferring
heat from a heat source to a heat sink which includes a restriction positioned
in the return section of the circulating loop which prevents heated vapor and
liquid from flowing to the condenser from the evaporator through the return leg
of the loop.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a
heat transfer apparatus for transferring heat between a heat source and a heat
sink wherein heated liquid is pumped from an evaporator to a condenser by high
velocity vapor and further wherein the apparatus has a heat transfer efficiency
in excess of 80%.
The foregoing and other objectives, features and
advantages of the invention will be more readily understood upon consideration
of the following detailed description of certain preferred embodiments of the
invention, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a simplified block diagram of the
present invention.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of the present
invention.
FIG. 3 is a diagram of the present invention taken along
lines 3--3 of FIG. 2.
FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating an alternate
embodiment of the restriction.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED
EMBODIMENT
Referring to FIG. 1, the elements of the present invention
will be discussed. A condenser 10 and an evaporator 12 are connected to form a
sealed loop. The condenser 10 is located within a heat sink 14, while the
evaporator 12 is located externally to the heat sink 14. The evaporator 12 is
positioned next to a heat source 16 so that heat may be transferred from the
heat source 16 to the evaporator 12. A vaporizable liquid is circulated between
the condenser 10 and the evaporator 12. The liquid is heated in the evaporator
12 and flows from the evaporator 12 into the inlet port 20 of the condenser 10
via supply pipe 18. The liquid is cooled in the condenser 10 and flows out of
the condenser outlet 22 back to the evaporator 12 via a return pipe 24.
Positioned within the return pipe 24 is a restriction 26 which restricts the
flow of heated liquid and vapor from the evaporator 12 into the outlet 22 of the
condenser 10.
Within the evaporator 12, the vaporizable heat transfer
liquid is heated by the heat source 16 so that heated liquid and heated vapor
are produced. The heated vapor provides the pumping mechanism by which the
heated liquid is propelled through the supply pipe 18 to the condenser 10. The
restriction 26 provides sufficient back pressure to the fluid flow from the
evaporator to prevent heated liquid or vapor from flowing out of the evaporator,
through the return pipe, and into the outlet 22 of the condenser 10.
Within the condenser 10, the heated liquid transfers heat to the walls
of the condenser by forced convection. The heated vapor is also condensed, which
provides some heat transfer. The cooled liquid and condensed vapor are then
drawn, by gravity or otherwise, from the condenser 10 through the outlets 22 and
back to the evaporator 12 via return pipe 24.
Referring more
particularly to FIG. 2, the preferred embodiment of the present invention will
now be described. In the preferred embodiment, the condenser 10 is a finned,
hair-pin-shaped condenser 110. The hair-pin condenser 110 is positioned within
the heat sink 14 so that one leg is located above the other leg. The upper leg
serves as the inlet 120 to the hair-pin condenser 110 while the lower leg serves
as the outlet 122. The hair-pin condenser 110 is held in place with a flange 28
which is bolted to the heat sink 14 with an intervening rubber gasket 30. This
arrangement allows for the removal, cleaning or removal of scale, and repair or
replacement of the hair-pin condenser 110. Both legs of the hair-pin condenser
110 are sloped to permit liquid flow from the upper leg through the lower leg.
In the preferred embodiment, the evaporator 12 is positioned below the
hair-pin condenser 110 and includes a plurality of finned tubes 41 to form a
multi-tube evaporator 112. The tubes 41 are arranged parallel to each other and
communicatively coupled at one end by a header 32 which has an inlet port 34.
The other ends of the finned tubes 41 are communicatively coupled together by a
header 36 which has an outlet port 38. The fins 40 of the tubes 41 enhance the
transfer of heat from the heat source 16 to the liquid contained within the
multi-tube evaporator 112.
In the preferred embodiment of the present
invention, the supply pipe 18 communicatively couples outlet port 38 of the
multi-tube evaporator 112 to the inlet 120 of the hair-pin condenser 110. The
supply pipe 18 first rises vertically from outlet port 38 of the multi-tube
evaporator 112, then slopes upward toward the hair-pin condenser 110 before
communicatively coupling with the upper leg 120 of the hair-pin condenser 110.
In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the return pipe 24
communicatively couples the outlet 122 of the hair-pin condenser 110 to the
inlet 34 of the multi-tube evaporator 112. Positioned within the return pipe 24
is a restriction 126 which can be a structure having an orifice having a
predetermined diameter, or a tube 127 having a predetermined inlet diameter
(FIG. 4), for example. These diameters are selected to prevent vapor from
traveling up the return pipe 24 from the multi-tube evaporator 112 to the
hair-pin condenser 110 and to promote stable operation. In one embodiment of the
invention, designed for a firing rate of 50,000 BTU/HR, an orifice having an
diameter of approximately 1/8 inch or a tube having an inner diameter of
approximately 3/16 inch provides satisfactory operation of the apparatus when
the inner diameter of the return pipe 24 is approximately one inch.
The
finned tubes used in both the multi-tube evaporator 112 and the hair-pin
condenser 110 of the above embodiment are approximately 7/8 inch inner diameter,
and the fins 40 are approximately 17/8 inch outer diameter, and spaced
approximately 7 per inch. The evaporator has approximately five 7-inch long
finned tubes. Outlet header 36 is rectangular in shape and has outside
dimensions of approximately one inch by two inch. The inlet header 32 is also
rectangular in shape and has outside dimensions of approximately one inch by one
inch. Each leg of the hair-pin condenser 110 is approximately 13 inches in
length. In a further embodiment, two hair-pin-shaped tubes are manifolded
together to form the hair-pin condenser 110.
In the preferred
embodiment, the heat sink 14 is a tank of potable water, and the heat source 16
is a gas burner. It is to be understood that the apparatus of the present
invention may be used with other heat sources, such as, an electrical element,
wood or coal fired heat sources, or any of a variety of possible heat sources.
Additionally, the heat sink 14 need not be a tank of potable water. For example,
the heat sink 14 can be a tank of some other material, such as air which is to
be heated, a room, or any of a number of applications which require the input of
heat.
In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the heat
transfer liquid is water, however, other vaporizable liquids can be used with
satisfactory results.
In operation, the multi-tube evaporator 112
performs much like a forced convection horizontal tube boiler, with a continuous
throughput of both liquid and vapor. Within the evaporator, the mass fraction
decreases in the direction of flow, and depending upon the operating conditions
and evaporator tube geometry, bubble, plug, churn, annular, and mist flow
regimes may be present. Under normal conditions, the liquid/vapor flow at the
evaporator outlet 38 is annular, with a thick film traveling at high velocity
through the supply pipe 18 all the way into the hair-pin condenser 110.
Heat transfer on the inside of the condenser is due to both forced
convection and evaporation/condensation with the former dominating. Hence, the
system is essentially a forced convection "loop" with the vapor serving as the
"pump."
During proper operation of the present invention a column of
water stands in the return pipe 24. This water column is equivalent to the
pressure drop through the system. The size of the restriction 126, in part,
determines the height of the water column, as do other component geometries, the
firing rate, and the operating temperature.
In the 50,000 BTU/HR firing
rate embodiment of the present invention, the multi-tube evaporator 112 is
located approximately 12 inches below the hair-pin condenser 110. The entire
flow loop is constructed of copper. Although the system can operate stably under
a full vacuum, the addition of a small amount of noncondensable gas, for
example, air, nitrogen, or argon, reduces the height of the water column in the
return tube 24, thus enabling closer evaporator-condenser spacing and a lower
heat transfer fluid volume. In the above embodiment of the present invention
only approximately 200 cubic centimeters of water is required. With this volume
of water, the evaporator tubes are less than one half filled thereby greatly
reducing any potential damage due to freezing.
Experimental results have
indicated that with the addition of a well insulated combustion chamber 17 about
the multi-tube evaporator 112, firing efficiencies in excess of 80% (based upon
the higher heating value of natural gas) can be achieved by the apparatus of the
present invention, when fired with an atmospheric natural gas burner at a rate
of 50,000 BTU/HR.
A method of transfering heat from a heat source to a
heat sink comprises heating a vaporizable liquid in an evaporator so that some
of the liquid is vaporized, propelling the heated, unvaporized liquid to a
condenser with the pressure of the vaporized liquid, cooling the heated liquid
and vapor in the condenser by transferring heat from the liquid and vapor to the
heat sink, returning the cooled liquid and condensed vapor through a return pipe
for further heating by the heat source, and creating a back-pressure in the
return pipe to restrict the flow of vapor from the evaporator through the return
pipe to the condenser.
The terms and expressions which have been
employed here are used as terms of description and not of limitation, and there
is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions of excluding
equivalents of the features shown and described, or portions thereof, it being
recognized that various modifications are possible within the scope of the
invention claimed.
* * * * *