[0001] The invention concerns finned heat-exchangers the fins of which are made from strip
material, as well as a manufacturing process for the elements of such heat-exchangers
and apparatus for carrying out the process according to the invention.
[0002] It is well-known that the manufacture of heat-exchangers is made up of several highly
labour-intensive phases. In a highly characteristic phase of the manufacturing process
parts of circular cross-section have to be made and welded together.
[0003] In the known methods of manufacturing heat-exchangers the specific starting material
consumption is high and there are several factors which exert an unfavourable influence
on this material consumption, such as the nature of the basic material, the thickness
of the material of the cooling tubes, the amount of off-cuts when cutting the heat
exchanger elements to length, the refuse or off-cuts formed when the cooling fins
or platelets are cut or sectioned, and the thickness of the fins and the platelets
which are actually thicker than they need to be purely from the point of view of heat
transfer, the thickness being dictated entirely by the requirements of the manufacturing
technology employed.
[0004] I It is furthermore known that the various processes for ensuring good metallic contact
between the individual constructional elements, such as the welds, adhesive bonds
and the so-called " hot dipping" processes, necessitate considerable technological
investment in the manufacturing process.
[0005] Further difficulties arise in the manufacture of heat-exchangers due to the worldwide
shortage of coloured and heavy metals and the labour-intensive nature and consequent
cost of the process.
[0006] Numerous proposals have been made for eliminating or reducing these drawbacks and
these proposals display considerable variation and per se valuable development trends.
However, no single prior proposal has eliminated all the difficulties outlined above.
[0007] Constructions have been proposed wherein the cooling fins or platelets have a special
configuration but in general this has merely made the manufacture more complicated
and required significant manual labour intervention. Consequently, such constructions
have been restricted to narrow and specialised areas.
[0008] British patent specification No.1,242,397 proposes a motor vehicle internal-combustion
engine radiator in which the heat-exchanging fluid ducts are partially defined by
bent aluminium foil adhesively bonded to other metallic parts by a heat-curable or
vulcanisable adhesive. However, it is a considerable problem with this proposal that
the use of a significant amount of synthetic material in effect represents a significant
amount of heat-insulating material thus forming heat dams in the path of heat flow.
[0009] Bearing in mind that the main application of this proposal is for a motor vehicle
radiator core, then if one were to attempt to construct the proposed device without
a heat curable adhesive, the bent fins would come into vibration during operation,
would be displaced from their rest position and would wear out the surface they are
in contact with by friction. Moreover, this proposed construction is in principle
incorrect in that it proposes a lengthy and flat liquid flow path which unfavourably
influences the heat transfer coefficient and operational reliability. The number of
bonds on the metal surfaces must be restricted for economy because for the bonds to
be good technological prerequisites, e.g. the cleanliness of the metallic surface,
have to be satisfied. Accordingly, the proposed welds and bonds cannot in the present
state of art be applied industrially in a satisfactory manner. Moreover, this construction
proposes aluminium plates of a thickness less than 0.3 mm and of an intricate surface
shape and such surfaces cannot be industrially secured together in large series in
an economic and reliable manner, not even with the proposed electron beam or plasma
arc-welding, even if one were to disregard the expense and low efficiency of such
methods. Moreover, a further disadvantage of this construction is that the heat-exchangers
are essentially only usable for one purpose, namely radiator core for a motor vehicle.
[0010] Other known proposals include e.g. Hungarian patent specification No.161,650 wherein
it is proposed to solder locally the "skirt" of aluminium fins or platelets to the
outer surfaces of tubes. However, because of the large amount of manual labour involved,
such heat-exchangers can only be manufactured where the fin or platelet thickness
reaches a certain minimum value and of course it also suffers from the well-known
disadvantages due to soldering alloys.
[0011] Another known construction for achieving good metallic contact between the tube and
the fin or platelet involves rolling zinc powder into the aluminium surface whereby
the zinc-coated surface becomes solderable. A disadvantage of this proposal is that
one surface of the aluminium fin must be fully coated with zinc in a thickness which
enables it to be soldered without burning through the layer. Such a layer requires
a thickness of the order of 1/10 mm which thickness however would otherwise in itself
be enough for the material of the fin. In this way, a double thickness fin results
which is a very expensive solution to the problem.
[0012] Hungarian published application No.CA-329, entitled " Finned Heat-Exchangers" discloses
a construction which is light in weight and utilises relatively little constructional
material while seeking to achieve good technical parameters. Its disadvantage is that
it is essentially suitable only for effecting heat exchange between two materials
of identical character and does not solve a reliable and suitable separation between
the two media. Moreover, it is not pressure-resistant and does not solve the problem
of manufacturing the fins in a way best suited from the point of view of flow technology.
Because of the good heat and anti-corrosion properties of aluminium, this material
is virtually exclusively used by research and development engineers in spite of the
above-indicated difficulties. The technologists have attempted to overcome these difficulties
partly by new geometrical configurations for the heat-exchanger elements. These attempts
have given rise to various processes for manufacturing helical fin tubes, such as
for instance in Hungarian patent specification Nos.166,214 or 157,652. Because of
its favourable heat-technological properties and versatility, helical fin tubes are
highly favoured in heat-exchanger technology but the difficulties of large material
requirements and labour intensive manufacturing also arise with such helical fin tubes.
[0013] West German Patent specification No.2060878 discloses a process of manufacturing
fin tubes wherein micro plates applied to the cylindrical tube are transformed into
helical fins.
[0014] The proposed construction is clever but uneconomic for the manufacture of helical
fin tubes because the final product is achieved in a rather complicated way, more
complicated than can be achieved at greater productivity with other known methods
and with fewer tools. Although the apparatus proposed can be used for applying the
plates or fins to the outer surface of the tube the fins are still not fastened sufficiently
securely in the absence of a really satisfactory technology for mechanical binding
or welding or soldering.
[0015] The above-mentioned specification mentions only as a desideratum that the plates
are fixed to the outer surface of the tube. Furthermore, it is known from U.S. Patent
specification No.3,745,631, that heat-- exchanger elements may also be manufactured
by a method wherein pretreated e.g. pre-tinnedflat copper tubes are welded together
with preshaped, bent copper fins.
[0016] This last-mentioned solution can only be used efficiently with a narrow choice of
materials and a narrow area of application. Besides, even within the narrow area of
application, e.g. a radiator core for a motor vehicle, the proposed solution does
not represent a complete break with traditional and generally widely used technologies
according to which the tube ends are welded in the water chamber one by one. This
represents extra expenses and the danger or risk of faults occurring is comparatively
large.
[0017] A process is known from U.S.patent specification No.3,855,682 for soldering together
an aluminium part and a ferrous metal or cuprous metal part wherein aluminium fins
or plates are soldered to copper or steel tubes with the aid of chemical reduction
of a metal fluoborate contained in an organic flux.
[0018] However, when soldering is used, independently of the actual technological process,
in everycase an oxide layer is removed from the surface to which then an alloy composition
containing heavy metals is applied. The heavy metal compositions form a galvanic unit
or element with the aluminium accompanied by the injured oxide layer which has been
rendered discontinuous. In this way, the phenomenon of electrolytic corrosion arises
with soldered bonds. In electrolytic corrosion phenomena, in accordance with the electric
normal potential, always the more electro-negative metal passes into the solution.
In this way, since aluminium and its alloys are more electro-negative than the heavy
metal, then it is always the alloy that passes into solution. This phenomenon is a
function of the nature of the metal being used but in all cases the phenomenon takes
place rather rapidly because no matter what alloy type is being employed in every
case a voltage difference of more than one volt is formed across the surfaces in question.
The relatively high voltage difference gives rise to gaps, crystal faults and other
corrosion damage and as a consequence up till now, not a single soldered aluminium
heat-exchanger has passed into general industrial use.
[0019] East German patent specification No.114,986 is concerned with a very individualistically
shaped heat-exchanger construction. The heat-exchanger is made from tubular plates
wherein there are two parallel tubes respectively designated dividing or distributing
and collecting tubes, and perpendicularly to these tubes parallel liquid flow paths
are formed. The tubular plates rolled and pressed in this way are associated with
flat surfaces between the tubular parts which are then cut and bent out of the plane
of the connection between two like tubular portions. The thus-obtained configuration
can be used singly or multiply to obtain a transverse flow heat-exchanger. Between
the parallel coolant paths turned out of the set plane, fins may be provided to improve
the heat transfer. On realising a heat-exchanger according to the aforesaid East German
patent specification, the bent out tubular passages become rather widely spaced from
each other for heat exchangers. In effect, what is formed in this way is a radiator-
like configuration the heat exchanging surface area per volume of which is really
rather low. Such a construction cannot therefore be economic for forced flow heat-exchangers
because the air flows through freely and unimpeded through the large gaps between
the individual elements.
[0020] An aim of the present invention is to reduce or eliminate the disadvantages of the
above-described processes and constructions and to provide strip--finned heat exchangers
as well as a suitable process and apparatus for their manufacture wherein a large
variety of heat exchanging elements can be manufactured with relatively low material
consumption in a process which is automatic or semi-automatic and which therefore
requires relatively little manual labour.
[0021] Another aim of the invention is to provide a heat exchanger wherein the cooling tubes
can be connected to each other and to other connecting elements in a leak- proof and
mechanically solid and rigid manner.
[0022] These aims are sought to be satisfied or achieved according to the present invention
in a finned heat exchanger wherein the foot portions of the fins are secured to the
tubes or plates provided with a tubular throughflow section by means of a permanent,
i.e. unreleasable bond wherein the tubular sections may be formed from plates rolled
onto each other and which is essentially characterised in that the contact surfaces,
that is to say the outer face of each fin is connected to a flat face of the plate
by a cohesive and/or adhesive bond.
[0023] In one preferred embodiment of the heat exchanger according to the invention the
outer surface of the tube has fins threadedly secured thereto, the fins being arranged
in a star configuration at suitable spacing along the length of the active tubular
sections of the heat-exchanger, in such a way that between the tubular surface and
the foot of the fin there is a cohesive fastening or bond.
[0024] According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a process wherein
the tubular elements of the heat-exchanger are formed by rolling plates onto each
other and the drawings or plans of the heat contact coupling are formed on the surfaces
of the plates by a photochemical process whereafter the tubular passages are brought
about by hot-rolling and expanding, e.g. pneumatically or hydraulically.
[0025] In the course of carrying out the process the heat-exchanger elements are assembled
and retained in a frame and the tubular passages are expanded by test- pressings or
a separately performed pressing and the directly heat-transmitting surfaces are brought
into close adhesive connection..
[0026] Simultaneously with the bending of the strip fins and/or the star strip fins, cohesive
bonds are formed with the tubular passages and the surface portions of the tubes.
[0027] The apparatus serving to carry out the process is characterised in that it has orienting
and carrying rollers which clamp a disc between them, the disc being provided with
bending arms, and a shaft of a rod extends between the-bending arms of the disc which
rod is in a radial conduit wherein it can be displaced and finally means are provided
for rotating and advancing the mechanism.
[0028] The rod is formed as a bending and welding rod or electrode while it may be formed
also as a bending and plating rod.
[0029] The invention breaks with hitherto known technologies and enables the manufacture
of strip finned heat exchanging elements in a completely novel manner by connecting
the strip fins with the cooling tubes or cooling passages by a direct adhesive or
cohesive bond.
[0030] The fundamental process of the manufacture of the heat exchanger is that the cooling
tubes should be connected to each other and/or to the walls of tubes in a leak-proof
and satisfactorily mechanically rigid manner. Hitherto this phase has been largely
effected by manual labour. Thus, this process requires highly qualified and skilled
operators and is also very highly energy-consuming. Because of the known technological
difficulties, such solutions have only rarely been employed when aluminium is the
constructional material. The significantly more expensive copper tubes have been used
in preference because of these difficulties.
[0031] The present invention obviates the hitherto known technologies and is based on the
discovery that two plates can be formed with cavities to supplant rows of tubes by
taking one of the plates and producing a diagram thereon corresponding to the coolant
flow passages which may be as desired, the diagram being formed by e.g. a chemical
process, then the other plate is placed on the diagram and the two plates are rolled
together, and plated, and then expanded in a template or pattern and in this way in
effect a row of tubes is obtained. According to a further preferred embodiment the
tubes are manufacturedty continuous drawing to produce tubes of the appropriate and
desired lengths and then by appropriately bending these tubes a weld- free row of
tubes is obtained.
[0032] Thus the technobgy according to the invention breaks with the cyclic or intermittent
fin production and the individual finningof the tubes which have hitherto been the
main obstacles to improving productivity. In the invention, the feet of the strip
fins are continuously cohesively bonded to the plates or tubes simultaneously and
in one step with the bending of the strip fins and moreover as desired this can take
place simultaneously in several rows and symmetrically on both sides of the plate.
[0033] It is furthermore a preferred feature of the invention that the use of soldering
or welding material is completely obviated when connecting the fins with the tubes
because the cohesive bond between the two components is effected by welding their
own material together simultaneously with the shaping or forming process.
[0034] The discovery that the application of the fins can take place simultaneously, as
a function of the construction, in several rows next or opposite to each other, can
provide a very great increase in productivity.
[0035] The forming and welding apparatus may be formed in such a way that in accordance
with the requirements of the construction the width andthickness of the strips and
the length or height of the strip fins and their spacing may be varied. In this way,
the heat-exchanging element that can be manufactured with the same apparatus may vary
within wide limits in dependence upon the area of application.
[0036] The invention is described, merely by way of example, with reference to the accompanying
drawings, schematically illustrating the invention and wherein:
Figure 1 is a cross-sectional view of a portion of a heat--exchanger formed from expanded
plates formed with tubular passages, with strip fins connected to flat faces of the
tubular passages;
Figure 2 is an elevation of the heat exchanger shown in Figure 1;
Figure 3 is a sectional view of the heat-exchanger provided with strip-like fins in
the course of manufacture thereof;
Figure 4 is a plan view of the portion of the heat exchanger shown in Figure 3;
Figure 5 is a cross-section illustrating . thin strip-like fins placed between the
cooling passages;
Figure 6 is a part-sectional and part-elevational view of the heat exchanger fragment
shown in Figure 5;
Figure 7 is a cross-section of a portion of a strip finned heat--exchanger having
a narrower or smaller fin spacing;
Figure 8 is a part-sectional, part-elevational view of the heat-exchanger shown in
Figure 7, and taken at right-angles thereto;
Figure 9 is a fragmentary perspective view of a portion of a recuperative heat--exchanger,
having a rotary hub, and having strip fins applied or wound in an Archimedean spiral;
Figure 10 is a view developed into a plane of the finned plate required for realising
a recuperative heat-exchanger according to Figure 9;
Figure 11 is a view similar to Figure 10 but showing the product for making a recuperative
heat exchanger when it is provided with fins and spacing plates on both sides thereof;
Figure lla is a schematic view of a heat-exchanger with offset tubular passages;
Figure 12 is a section of a motor vehicle radiator core having twin chambers and a
plurality of flat rows of tubes;
Figure 13 is a sectional view taken along the stepped cross-sectional line A-A of
Figure 12;
Figure 14 is a cross-section of the motor vehicle radiator core shown in Figure 13,
taken along the line B-B;
Figure 15 is a perspective view of a condenser or a portion of a water-cooler;
Figure 16 is a front elevation of a tube provided with fins in a star configuration;
Figure 17 is a side view of the tube shown in Figure 16;
Figure 18 is a cross-section of the tube taken along the planes indicated by A-A in
Figure 16;
Figure 19 is a diagrammatic elevation 'of an industrial air-cooler provided with star fins;
Figure 20 is a diagrammatic scheme for apparatus for manufacturing a serial star-finned
tube; and Figure 21 is a cross-section of the apparatus shown in Figure 20, taken
along the line A-A.
[0037] 5 Referring to Figure 1, there is shown a fragmentary heat-exchanger wherein the
tubular passages 3 are formed from plates which have been welded together and plated
and wherein the strip shaped fins 1 are fixed thereto by securing together a flat
side 2a of the tubular passage 3 and the outer face la of the strip fins 1.
[0038] Figure 2 illustrates by an arrow I the direction of flow of the heating or cooling
medium while the arrow designated by II indicates the direction of flow of air.
[0039] In forming the tubularpassages 3 it is expedient to place one of the welding electrodes
5 which is provided with a water channel and which is therefore water-cooled, inside
the full length of the tubular passage 3. The welding electrode 5 then not only serves
to weld the fins 1 to the tubular passages 3 but also serves to ensure that the tubular
passage should not collapse during the formation and welding of the strip-like fins.
When the tubular passage has been equipped with the strip fins, then at the end of
that procedure the electrode 5 may be removed. Figure 3 shows the welding seam 4 at
the foot of the fin 1. This particular solution can only be used for U-shaped tubular
passages.
[0040] The plan view of Figure 4 does not show the welding electrode itself but shows the
trace it leaves on the fin 1. When the pitch or spacing of the fins is greater then
the welding to be employed must have a different geometry to ensure greater metallic
contact areas.
[0041] The cross-section of Figure 5 shows an embodiment wherein thin strip-fins 1 are connected
to the surface of the plate 2 at several locations. The connection or fastening between
the fins and the plates may according to Figure 6 be effected by ultra-sonic welding
or, as shown in Figure 7, where the material of the strip fins is thicker, and the
pitch or spacing of the fins is smaller, by spot welding. This is also shown in Figure
8.
[0042] Figure 9 shows a part of a recuperative heat exchanger. This heat-exchanger is provided
with strip-like fins welded on the plate 2 which has been formed into an Archimedean
spiral shape.
[0043] In this case, the material of the strip fins 1 is not produced by sepanting the plated
sheets but instead by a previous plate bending process, expediently by bending the
edges of the plates.
[0044] As may be seen from Figure 10, the plates 1 bent in the above-described manner and
carrying the fins 1 are spot-welded at their outer faces la to plates 2 the weld seams
being indicated at 4.
[0045] The same result can also be achieved by providing both sides of the plate 2 with
fins 1, as shown in Figure 11.
[0046] Figure lla shows a forced-flow heat--exchanger portion wherein the strip fins 1,
the welded and plated sheets2 and tubular passages 3 are connected in series and in
parallel in accordance with the well-known criteria of heat-transfer technology.
[0047] The outer faces la of the strip fins 1 are welded at locations 4a to plates disposed
at the edges of tubular passages and between such passages. In this way, the plurality
of fin rows welded to the plate 2 form a finned heat exchanger element. Several completed
heat exchanger elements maybe assembled together by offsetting one of the rows with
the aid of the strip fins and placing it on the adjacent row while the third row is
aligned with the first row of such elements. From the point of view of manufacturing
technology, it is expedient to form one inlet and one outlet. In this way, each individual
heat-exchanging element in effect forms a closed system with only a minimal risk of
faults and leaks.
[0048] In another expedient embodiment, the heat-exchanger elements to be assembled together
are of one piece. The diagram or plan of the individual or tubular passages of the
heat exchangers together with their connecting ducts, are continuously applied to
the plates 2, with a suitable offset, and then after rolling, expanding and finning,
the individual heat-exchangers are bent forwards and backwards and laid upon each.
The heat-exchanger formed in this way is thereafter processed or handled as described
above. The figure does not show the inlets and outlets which can be formed in any
suitable manner by welding a cylindrical tube into the tubular passages 3. Another
expedient solution may lie in welding in the outlet opening of the tubular passages,
which are of course absolutely necessary for the expansion process and by resistance
welding or inductance welding connecting eyes are welded at the appropriate locations
of the tubular passages of the sheet 2. These eyes are then suitable for making further
connections. This solution is particularly advantageous where the sheet 2 is made
from aluminium.
[0049] After welding the tubular connections, the covered heat-exchanger held in a frame
is subjected to pressure tests. The pressure test is of course a compulsory matter
for all heat-exchangers. However, in the heat-exchanger according to the invention,
the pressure test is not only a safety and reliability check but at the same time
also forms the final or finishing technological phase of the assembly. 14hen the covered
and framed tubular elements are subjected to suitable pressure, then the tubular passages
inevitably undergo a certain deformation and extension in the direction of the strip
fins. This extension is sufficient to ensure that due to any manufacturing or assembling
inaccuracies, any loose heat-exchanging elements should be tensioned or come into
tight engagement with a frame or with each other. In this way it can be ensured that
the flat faces 2a of the tubular passages 3 should tightly engage the outer faces
la of the strip fins 1 whereby to form a metallic contact therebetween which is suitable
for good metallic heat transfer.
[0050] Figures 12, 13 and 14 illustrate a heat-- exchanger in the form of a motor vehicle
radiator core. The principle of construction of the strip fins 1 and the tubular passages
3 , that is to say the basic characteristic of the heat-exchanger elements, is identical
with the heat exchangers shown in the above described embodiments, although of course
the constructional configuration and the heat flow connections are different. The
water chamber of the radiator core in the illustrated embodiment is of the twin-chamber
type. A double layer baffle plate 11 separates the hot water chamber lOa from the
cooled or cold water chamber 10b. Each individual cooling element 6 is connected by
way of a tubular neck 12 to the water chamber 10 whereby to form a double passage
12a and 12b.The water to be cooled flows through passage 12a into the cooling element
6. It then flows through the two tubular passages 3a, turns as it flows through tubular
passage 3b
; flows back'through the cooling passages 3c and having cooled down, discharges through
the passage 12b into the cooled or cold water chamber lOb.
[0051] The mutually superposed cooling elements 6 are connected in parallel in accordance
with the foregoing flow scheme.
[0052] The motor vehicle radiator describes in the preceding paragraphs differs from hitherto
known constructions. The new construction has numerous advantages, for instance it
is not necessary to solder a large number of pipes to the tube wall. With conventional
motor vehicle radiators each tube is associated with two soldering operations for
soldering into the tubular wall, while in the present invention one tube wall connection
is associated with four tubular passages.
[0053] The tube wall 13 is expediently produced by deep-drawing, so that it should be unitary
with the sides of the water chamber 13a. In this way a very simple water chamber configuration
can be achieved because its one open side may be closed simply by a rimmed cover 14
which bears against the sides 13a of the water chamber and is matched thereto. The
cooling elements 5 are superposed in the distribution according to the drawing and
are placed in the frame 15. The connection openings 13c of the tubular wall 13 are
aligned with the tube necks 12 onto which on assembly the tube walls 13 are fitted.
[0054] The tube wall 13 is fixed to the shoulders 15b of the frame 15a by spot-welding or
line-welding. The tube necks 12 are connected in a leakproof manner e.g. by brazing
dr by another expediently chosen method of welding, to the tube wall 13. In the case
where one utilises plate materials which are so thin that a high quality weld cannot
be used at all, then it is expedient to use fusion adhesive bonding. This insulation
is of neutral effect on heat transfer because it is in contact with only one side
of the water chamber. The cooling at the air-side of the adhesive material disposed
between the tube neck 12 and the opening 13c is also ensured because the air stream
is at all times in contact with the surface 13b. In the figure arrows I indicate the
path of the coolant water while the arrows II indicate the direction of flow of the
cooling air.
[0055] Figure 15 illustrates a complex industrial condenser or water cooler. The strip fins
1 are disposed on the tubular passages 3 in agreement with the embodiment already
shown in Figures 1 and 2 above but its plate 2 has more tubular passages 3. The drawing
does not show the end construction of the cooling elements 6 which may at one end
be e.g.open with the tubular passages 3 coupled into the tubular wall while at its
other element, it may e.g. be flattened and open as for instance is shown in Figures
12, 13, and 14 with regard to the tubular neck 12 of the motor vehicle radiator. In
the present illustrated embodiment, there is shown a slit fin 30 wherein before bending
and welding a cutter cuts the strip at several places intermittently to produce openings
or slits 30a. Another manner of construction is shown by the cut-away strip fin 31.
Here, before bending and welding, appropriately sized strips are cut intermittently
at several locations from the basic strip, to produce openings 31a. The slit strip
fin 30 and the cut-away strip--fin 31 represent embodiments which for certain heat
exchangers can produce a greater air side heat transfer. It is an advantage of this
embodiment that the transmission tool can be operated synchronously with the fin forming
apparatus so that this part operation does not require a separate working phase. The
embodiment shown in Figure 15 makes it possible to manufacture in a particularly simple
manner the very large air coolers used in power stations, in the chemical industry
etc. because the elements may be made in accordance with the technical requirements
in any arbitrary length and width and can be finished to the required size.
[0056] Figures 16 and 17 illustrate a further advantageous embodiment of the present invention
wherein the fins are in a star formation around the tube. As shown in these Figures,
a tube 40 is provided with a star-shaped strip fin formation 41 helically applied
thereto with a pitch 42 and with a gap 42a between adjacent "threads" or turns. The
bottom portions or feet of the star fins are designated by 41a and they connect with
the outer surface 40a of the tube 40. The height and axial and radial spacing of the
fins 41 may be varied in accordance with actual need. It is an advantage to arrange
the fins in a star shaped configuration that in this way one can obtain purely parallel
or counterflow heat exchange. It is a further advantage that should operational conditions,
e.g. frosting, require alarger fin spacing, then the fin surface area per unit tube
length can be increased by increasing the height of the fins. Its further advantage
is that the cylindrical tube can be continuously or intermittently finned with the
star-configuration fins.
[0057] In certain areas of application, the use of a cylindrical tube may become an operational
criterion under certain conditions. This embodiment satisfies this requirement. The
arrow I indicates the direction of flow of the coolant medium, while arrow II indicates
the flow of air.
[0058] Figure 18 is a cross-sectional view of a further detail of the tube shown in Figures
16 and 17 and provided with fins in a star configuration. Figure 18 shows a combined
or composite manner of assembly: 40 is a drawn steel tube provided by hot-dipping
with a metallic coating 43, which is expediently aluminium. The metallic coating layer
43 protects the steel tube 40 against corrosion as well as forms the outer surface
40a thereof. The bottom or foot 41a of the star fin 41 is fixed to the surface 40a
by a welded seam 44.
[0059] Figure 19 is a half-elevation of an ammonia cooler wherein strip fins 41 are applied
in a star configuration and with a "pitch" 42 by welding on the outer surface 40a
of a tube 40, with thin gaps 42a. The star strip-fins 41 are welded to the tube 40
with a spacing appropriate to the length of the cooling element. In the manufacturing
stage the tubes are straight but after being provided with fins, the finned tubes
are bent according to arcs 45 into a sinuous tube to provide one element of the cooling
unit. The cooling element 46 is connected to a distributor pipe 47 by way of a tube
stub 46a while it is connected to a collecting manifold 48 by way of a tube stub 46b.
The cooling elements 46 are disposed in a mutually superposed and offset configuration
but the Figure shows one row only, and in this way they form a complete heat-exchanger
battery. A ventilation or blower housing 49 is connected to a coolant cover 50. The
cooling liquid enters the cooler at arrow Ia and is discharged therefrom along Ib.
The arrow IIa indicates the direction of flow of the air entering the cooler while
arrow IIb indicates the direction of the exiting air.
[0060] The above described and illustrated heat exchangers are all manufactured by a technology
based on the same inventive concept. Since they are the same, only one fabrication
apparatus will be described in Figures 20 and 21 which schematically shows the manufacturing
process and apparatus for making fin tubes with a star-shaped fin configuration. The
apparatus illustrated is suitable for making in a single working phase the star-shaped
fin configuration 41 and to perform the welding or plating, or possibly soldering,
simultaneously with the fin manufacture to secure the fins 41 and the tube 40 together.
The illustrated apparatus is capable of manufacturing steel pipe and steel star fins
and also a steel pipe provided with an aluminised surface by a hot.-dipping method,
to which then aluminium fins are secured. However, the apparatus may also be used
with other constructional materials in an efficient manner.
[0061] Figure 20 shows the manufacturing and welding- plating apparatus in front elevation.
[0062] Figure 21 shows the same apparatus but in cross-section, in the plane of symmetry
of the tube. Orienting and carrying rollers 51, 52 and 53 are equiangularly disposed
at 120° spacing around a circle. They hold or clamp a disc 55 provided with bending
arms. The rim portion 55a of the disc 55 is in engagement with shoulders 57 of the
said rollers in such a waythat - relative rolling motion on the cylindrical surfaces
should be easy. Bending arms 55c are disposed at a suitable angular spacing on the
side surface of the disc 55. The outer diameter of the disc 55 is provided with a
so-called "toothed gear" formation 55b which meshes with a driving toothed gear wheel
58. The bending and welding or plating head 59 is capable of performing vertical reciprocating
movement in the arrangement according to the Figure and is synchronously controlled
or guided with intermittent angular displacements of the bending disc 55.
[0063] The bending and welding head 59 is made up of two parts: a housing 59b which is connected
to the driving mechanism and which can be cooled and, on the other hand, from a bending
welding or plating, rod-like element 59a which is made from copper or steel depending
on the intended use and operational considerations. The strip material 60 is fed into
the apparatus from a stock roll or disc 60a.
[0064] Figure 21a illustrates a tube heater 61 which is required when it is desired to weld
or plate thin star strip fins to a thick-walled tube. The arrow III designates the
flow of coolant that can be supplied for the head 59. Figures 20 and 21 illustrate
the core tube 40 and the fins 41 of star-shape configuration.
[0065] Figure 20 also shows the schematic electrical circuit diagram of the spot-welding
machine associated with the manufacture of the star-finned tubes.
[0066] The apparatus illustrated and described so far may operate in two different expedient
modes within the possibilities provided by the invention:
First mode of operation: the rollers 51, 52 and 53 guide the disc 55 provided with
the bending arms in such a manner that the disc 55 should have an eccentricity X towards
the bending and welding head.59, measured from the centreline of the tube.
This is required so that the angularly displaced bending arms 55c should be readily
displaceable, and removable from between the star fins 41 in an axial direction when
during rotation they reach a position of smaller diameter. The disc 55 is driven by
means of the ring of teeth 55b from the driving gear 58.
[0067] Rotation of the disc 55 is intermittent and in each indexing movement the angular
displacement of the disc 55 is such that the bisection line of the angle included
with a given bending arm 55c should coincide with the line of action of the bending-welding
head 59. In this position of the disc 55, control means not shown in the drawing press
the head 59 downwardly in the direction indicated by arrow IV so that the rod 59b
should come to a stop on the outer surface of the tube 40. During this time the strip
60 is drawn in and bent in accordance with the desired dimensions of both fins 41.
The foot 41a of each fin is pressed with great force against the outer surface of
the core tube 40 which has been heated by the heater 61 and thus a welded or plated
connection comes about. Then, the head 59 is retracted in the direction of arrow 4
and then the disc 55 with its bending arms indexes in the direction of arrow V by
another unitary angular displacement and the above described manufacturing steps are
repeated cyclically.
[0068] In the illustrated operating system, there are arrows not referenced at the right-hand
side (-as viewed ) of Figure 21 and these arrows illustrate the intermittent rotational
and advancing movement of the tube to result in the desired star fin configuration
of suitable pitch and spacing.
[0069] A further development of this mode of operation constitutes the second mode of operation
wherein the head 59 moves along the direction of arrow IVa, that is to say the fin
foot 41a is pressed against the outer surface of the tube 40. At this point, an electric
spot welding apparatus is brought into operation, the apparatus comprising contact
terminals 75 and 76, a regulator 70,-a transformer 71, a switch 72 and leads 73 and
74. The spot welding apparatus serves to weld the feet 41a of the fins to the outer
surface 40a of the tube. The thus obtained spot-welding 44 provides reliable connections
and gives good heat transfer between the tube 40 and the fins 41.
[0070] In a highly expedient embodiment the above-described two processes may be combined
by means of the use of an ultrasonic generator 80 which brings the head 59 into vibration
with the aid of the rod 80a along the direction of the arrows VI. The high frequency
vibration promotes the welding of the connected parts and thus the apparatus may be
operated with a lower electric and heat load. The combined ultrasonic welding may
with particular advantage be employed in the formation of thin aluminium strip fins
and thin-walled tubular passages in which case the preheater 61 may even by omitted.
[0071] The apparatus and method for manufacturing strip finned heat-exchangers according
to the invention and such heat-exchangers have the following principal advantages:
The heat-exchangers require relatively little material, are of low weight and have
a high specific heat output and efficiency.
The heat-exchangers are highly versatile: this is true both for the cold and the hot
side of each energetic system.
[0072] The invention enables the use of highpressure and thus high-temperature motor vehicle
cooling, in contrast to the hitherto known motor vehicle radiators, and this in turn
gives rise to several improved or enhanced effects e.g. in the fields of manufacture
and operation of motor vehicles:
(a) because of the higher temperature the radiator may have a smaller cooling surface
area, its weight may be reduced and its costs can be reduced also,
(b) the thermal efficiency of the engine becomes more favourable which represents
a significant and favourable change in the fuel consumption.
[0073] The process provides a solution which enables aluminium to be used as constructional
material in a very wide area of application in the manufacture of heat-exchangers
because it eliminates the significant technological difficulties, as experienced hitherto,
in the course of welding and soldering this metal. Moreover, the technology may also
be used for combined metallic materials.
[0074] The heat-exchanger and the technology for making it may be automated since both the
heat-exchanger construction and the apparatus for making it can be used for several
purposes and several sizes.
[0075] In addition'to automatisability, the technology allows a high degree of mechanised
prefabrication. This in turn minimises the labour requirements. Not only does this
improve manufacturing costs but also greatly reduces the risks and sources of human
error. The net effect is that the quality of the manufacture is improved to such an
extent that per unit time the heat-exchanger area is greater than that with the known
solutions.
[0076] The process and apparatus require relatively little investment, their use and operation
do not require any special measures for protecting operators and they do not have
a harmful effect on the environment or on the health of the operators.
1. Finned heat-exchanger, comprising fins secured in a non-releasable manner to plates
provided with tubes and/or tubular passages, characterised in that the surfaces in
contact, that is to say, the outer faces (la) of the fins (1; 41) and the flat faces
(2a) of the plates (2), are connected by a cohesive and/or adhesive bond and the tubular
passages (3, 3a, 3b) are formed from plates (2) which have been secured together by
rolling. -
2. Heat-exchanger according to claim 1, characterised in that the fins (41) are secured
in a star-configuration to the outer surface (40a) of a tube (40) at mutual spacing
(42) by means of a cohesive bond between the said outer surface (40a) and the foot
of each fin (41a).
3. A process for manufacturing finned heat-exchangers according to claim 1 or claim
2, characterised in that the tubular passages (3, 3a, 3b) are formed by rolling plates
together and applying, expediently by a photochemical process, a diagram or plan of
the desired heat connections to the surface of the plates and then the plates are
treated or plated and the tubular passages are formed by expanding the plates.
4. A process according to claim 3, characterised in that the heat-exchanger elements
are assembled and held in a frame and the tubular passages are expanded by test pressurisation
or by separately performed pressurisation, whereby the directly heat-transmitting
surfaces are brought into tight adhesive contact.
5. A process according to claim 3 or 4, characterised in that while the fins are bent,
simultaneously therewith a cohesive bond is formed between the fins and the surfaces
of the tubular passages and tubes.
6. Apparatus for carrying out the process according to any of claims 3 to 5, characterised
in that orienting and supporting rollers ( 51, 52, 53) hold a disc (55) provided with
bending arms (55c) and further characterised in that a rod (59a) extends between the
arms (55c) of the disc (55), said rod (59a) being displaceably disposed in a radial
guide, and there is provided a mechanism for rotating the disc and for advancing the
rod.
7. Apparatus according to claim 6, characterised in that the rod (59a) is formed as
a bending-welding rod.
8. Apparatus according to claim 7, characterised in that the rod (59a) is formed as
a bending and rolling or plating rod.
9. Apparatus according to any of claims 6 to 8, characterised in that it is provided
with a tube heater (61).
10. Apparatus according to any of claims 6 to 8, characterised in that an ultrasonic
generator (80) is connected to a head (59) in which said rod is mounted, the said
generator (80) being disposed in the vicinity of the upper portion of the said head.
11. Apparatus according to any of claims 6 to 8, characterised in that the rod (59a)
is formed as a spot-welding tool and forms part of an electric circuit associated
with the apparatus, which circuit contains a regulator (70), a transformer (71) and
conductors (73, 74) connecting these parts and further connecting terminals (75, 76).