BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a system for cleaning the inside diameters in a
bank of tubes in a heat exchanger system, tube cleaners for use therein and methods
for their use.
[0002] Heat exchangers of the type contemplated by the presented invention comprise condensers
utilized in applications such as steam generating power plants. A condenser includes
tubes arranged in a tube bundle. Water flowing through the condenser tube bundle picks
up heat from condensing steam on a shell side or outside diameters of the tubes.
Based on conventional design considerations, a plurality of condensers may be installed
in one power plant, each condenser having a large number of tubes. The selection
of number of tubes and number of condensers is a function of the design parameters
for each system. These design parameters include the amount of water to be pumped
through the tubes, the temperature of steam contacting the tubes and various flow
rates. According to R. J. Stoker and E. F. Seavey, "The Selection of Large Steam Surface
Condensers,"
Combustion, 1967, in a survey of fifty condenser units in a nominal 600 megawatt plant, a nominal
flow through the condensers could be 300,000 gallons per minute. In one example, 300,000
square feet of surface area in the one condenser are required for cooling. In a nominal
design, this surface is provided using tubes 50 feet long and having an outside diameter
of one inch. Since maximum surface area is provided by long, small diameter tubes,
it is easy to see that individual condensers having 40,000 tubes in a bundle would
not be uncommon.
[0003] It will be readily apparent that any buildup of coatings inside these tubes or any
other fouling will provide the highly disadvantageous effects of buildup and back
pressure, making it more difficult to circulate the required large quantities of water
through the tubes, and of creating a thermal insulation on the inner surface of the
tubes, tending to defeat the very purpose of the heat exchanger itself. Since large
quantities of water flow through the tubes and small buildups have a highly disadvantageous
effect, online cleaning is very important in maintaining the efficacy and economy
of the system. The continuous removal of deposited scale from the insides of the
tubes will prevent pitting or concentration cell attack, a form of galvanic corrosion
and will prevent further scale deposition. This will fur ther prevent destruction
of the tubes. Advantages of a cleaning program are further discussed in "Condenser
Cleaning Improves Economics,"
Electrical World, December, 1969, page 31, and in A. F. Stegelman and R. Renfftlen, "Outline Mechanical
Cleaning of Heat Exchangers, "
Hydrocarbon Processing, January 1983, page 95.
[0004] An established method of cleaning consists of circulating sponge rubber balls through
the heat exchange unit. The balls are forced by pressure to traverse the tubes and
each wipe the inside of the tube. While a sponge rubber ball will have only a minor
effect on one pass, the balls are commonly maintained in circulation through several
hundred or several thousand passes with the objective of cleaning the interior diameter
of the tubes. Apparatus must be provided for collection the sponge rubber balls after
they exit from the tubes, conducting them through a recirculation path and reinjecting
them into a liquid stream for reintroduction into the tubes. Therefore, the art has
developed various forms of cleaners and systems for circulating them repeatedly through
tube bundles. The present invention seeks to provide advantages not found in the
prior art and elimination of disadvantages as are included in the prior art further
discussed here.
[0005] Exemplary of many prior art systems is United States Patent No. 2,801,824, issued
on August 6, 1957, to J. Taprogge. In the apparatus disclosed therein, condenser tubes
are automatically cleaned by cleaning elements comprising "rubbing bodies" which are
carried along tube walls by a liquid medium such as the cooling water. The rubbing
bodies are moved through the heat exchanger in continuous circulation and intercepted
from the outlet of the spent medium by a suitable device and returned again into the
fresh liquid medium supplied to and flowing through the heat exchanger. The suitable
device comprises a funnel shaped strainer in this apparatus. Another such system is
disclosed in United States Patent No. 4,351,487, issued on September 28, 1982, to
L. Milia. In the disclosure therein, the suitable device is a sieve means which may
be formed as a "V" to intercept the outlet flow from the condenser when the system
operates in a mode for recirculating the cleaning means. Alternatively, each leg of
the "V" may be rotated so that the two legs are parallel and flow without intercepting
the outlet from a condenser when a cleaning opeation is not being performed. Many
other arrangements are provided in which a means intercepting the entire outlet from
the condenser is positioned to intercept the flow and in which the intercepting means
may be "feathered" to permit the flow to pass without being screened.
[0006] The screens themselves create a pressure drop. They may be subject to clogging, depending
on the nature of contaminants found in the cooling water to exacerbate the magnitude
of the pressure drop. The above-described construction requires the use of strong,
durable screens to withstand the full flow issuing from the condenser. The price of
a cleaning system is considerable. In an exemplary 800 megawatt steam generating station
built around 1975, a nominal price for the equipment attributable to the system for
recirculating cleaning elements, separate and apart from the condensers themselves,
was one million dollars. It is desirable to provide a system in which simpler construction
is possible and in which it is not necessary to intercept the entire flow issuing
from the condenser station.
[0007] As to the cleaning balls themselves, many forms have been provided commonly utilizing
sponge rubber of a slightly larger dimension than the inner diameter of the tube to
be cleaned. Over a large number of recirculating passes through the tubes, the sponge
rubber balls tend to remove undesired buildups in the interior of heat exchanger tubes.
After separation from the outlet stream from the condenser, the cleaning elements
are recirculated. A means for separating worn out balls which are decreased in size
prior to delivery to the inlet stream to the condenser may be provided.
[0008] The cleaning elements are normally unevenly distributed through the tubes within
the banks in a condenser since the cleaning elements are heavier than water when recirculated
and returned for introduction into tubes in a condenser. As stated above, there can
be up to 40,000 tubes in a bank. Therefore, some tubes in a bundle will be 20 feet
higher than others. Turbulence normally encountered in an inlet manifold at the entrances
to the tubes will not overcome the effects of gravity on the heavier-than-water cleaning
elements in terms of providing for uniform vertical distribution of cleaning elements.
Tubes which are vertically above other tubes will therefore tend to have fewer cleaning
elements circulating therethrough with uneven cleaning resulting. Consequences can
be significant. Upper tubes may not be cleaned effectively and eventually must be
mechanically and/or chemically cleaned. Acid cleaning is a known form of cleaning.
There is the attendant expense of the cleaning operation and significant "downtime"
for the condenser, which often results in the shutting down of the power plant itself.
[0009] In circulating, the cleaning elements must strike against the screens, separating
sieves or the like, to be removed from the outlet flow and recirculated. The necessary
action of this separation reduces the useful life of the cleaning elements. It is
desirable to have a system in which separation does not require the rolling of cleaning
elements against a screen.
[0010] The geometry of the cleaning elements can provide for difficulty and expense in their
construction. It is desired to provide for the option of simplifying construction.
[0011] Prior art refers to means used for cleaning inner diameters by many differnt terms,
e.g. plug, pig, ball, etc. Such names will be referred to herein as tube cleaners.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0012] It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a tube cleaning system
for a heat exchanger of the condenser type in which means are provided for intercepting
tube cleaners exiting from a condenser without the need for intercepting the entire
liquid outlet thereof.
[0013] It is a more specific object of the present invention to provide a cleaning system
of the type described in which large screens for receiving the entire outlet flow
from the heat exchanger for the purpose of removing tube cleaners therefrom are eliminated.
[0014] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a heat exchanger tube
cleaning system including means for removing tube cleaners from a conduit which may
be opened to the atmosphere.
[0015] It is also an object of the present invention in one form to provide a system of
the type described in which tube cleaners may be removed from outlet flow at ambient
pressure, intercepted, channeled to recirculation means entrained in an injection
flow by suction and circulated through condenser tubes under pressure.
[0016] It is a more specific object of the present invention to provide a system of the
type described for cooperation with tube cleaners having a positive buoyancy at a
first ambient pressure and neutral or negative buoyancy under increased pressure.
[0017] It is a more specific object of the present invention to provide a system of the
type described including means for pressurizing a variable buoyancy tube cleaner prior
to entry into an inlet manifold of a condenser.
[0018] It is a further, separate object of the present invention to provide a tube cleaner
comprising a closed cell material which may be pressurized to a selected buoyancy.
[0019] It is a more specific object of the present invention to provide a cleaning element
of the type described having positive buoyancy at atmospheric pressure and having
a compressibility selected so that the tube cleaner may be compressed to achieve a
neutral or negative buoyancy to pressure levels expected to be encountered in streams
flowing to a heat exchanger for circulating heat exchanger cleaning elements therethrough.
[0020] It is another more specific object of the invention to provide in one form a cleaning
element structured to have a limit to its increase in density in response to pressure
thereto, whereby limited variable density is provided.
[0021] It is another object of the present invention, in one form, to provide heat exchanger
cleaning elements which are easier to fabricate than spherical sponge rubber balls.
[0022] It is a further object of the present invention, in one form, to provide tube cleaners
of the type described comprising a combinationm of a first variable buoyancy member
means and second member not of variable buoyancy but for facilitating cleaning, whereby
the entire structure is of variable buoyancy.
[0023] It is also another more specific object of the invention in one form to provide tube
cleaners of the type comprising a buoyancy member and a cleaning member which may
be formed to have substantially neutral buoyancy in the above-described application
and in which the buoyancy of individual tube cleaners is fixed.
[0024] It is another object of the invention, in one form, to provide a system and method
utilizing open cell, e.g. sponge rubber, tube cleaners as variable buoyancy members.
[0025] Briefly stated, in accordance with the pres sent invention, there are provided a
cleaning system for circulation tube cleaners through condenser tubes, tube cleaners
and a method for cleaning tube inside diameters in apparatus such as heat exchangers.
Vertically disposed means intercept a portion of the flow from an outlet manifold
of a condenser and deflect cleaning elements therefrom to conduit means. The conduit
means direct cleaning elements to recirculation means and reinjection means which
provide the cleaning elements to an inlet manifold for circulation through heat exchange
elements. The recirculation means may include separator means for separating worn
cleaning elements and may further include a deaeration chamber. Entraining means draw
the cleaning elements into a stream and subject them to pressure wherein they are
compressed and entrained for entry into the cleaning stream. The tube cleaners are
made to have a density such that they approach neutral density under conditions expected
to be encountered at the entry to condenser tubes. In one form, cleaning elements
comprise closed cell material. An example is polyurethane foam. When compressed, the
cleaning element increases in density and decreases in buoyancy. Variation in buoyancy
of the tube cleaners may be limited. The cleaning elements are formed so as to float
at atmospheric pressure and to reach neutral buoyancy when compressed at expected
pressures at the entrance to the heat exchange tubes. These tube cleaners float upon
exiting from the outlet manifold. In a novel method, buoyancy of the cleaning elements
is varied during the course of recirculation as described above. Further, cleaning
elements having a diameter smaller than the inside diameter of the tubes may be inserted
intentionally into the flow path of the cleaning purposes.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0026] The means by which the foregoing objects and features of novelty are achieved are
pointed with particularity in the claims forming the concluding portion of the specification.
The invention, both as to its organization and manner of operation, may be further
understood by reference to the following description with the following drawings.
[0027] Of the drawings:
Figure 1 is a mechanical schematic illustration of a system constructed in accordance
with the present invention and incorporating a condenser stage for cleaning inner
diameters of tubes in the heat exchanger.
Figure 2 is a partial elevation in cross- sectional form taken along lines II-II
of Figure 1 illustrating means for separating cleaning elements from the outlet flow
from the heat exchanger;
Figure 3 is a sectional plan view of the means illustrated in Figure 2 and is taken
along lines III-III of Figure 1;
Figures 4 and 5 are isometric illustrations of tube cleaners constructed in accordance
with the present invention consisting of closed cell material, figure 5 being partially
broken away;
Figures 6 through 9 illustrate additional geometrical configurations of tube cleaners
and cleaning elements comprised of both single buoyancy material for cleaning combined
with pressure-variable buoyancy material;
Figures 10 and 11 are isometric illustrations, in partially cross-sectional form,
of tube cleaners utilizing compressible gas as a variable density means;
Figures 12-17 are isometric illustrations of further configurations of suitable tube
cleaners constructed in accordance with the present invention; and
Figures 18 and 19 illustrate a system utilitzing open cell tube cleaners in accordance
with the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0028] Figure 1 is an elevation in schematic and partially in cross-sectional form of a
system 1 in which tube cleaners elements 2 are circulated to clean inside diameters
of tubes 3 in a condenser 4. A recirculation system 6 is operable to selectively return
tube cleaners 2 which exit from the condenser 4 to the inlet thereof.
[0029] The supply of cooling water is provided from an inlet conduit 10. The inlet conduit
10 can supply cooling water from a river, lake or other source. It should be realized
that cooling water is an example of one suitable form of cooling fluid medium which
can be circulated through the present system. Other media may be utilized. However,
water will most commonly be provided in embodiments in which the condenser 4 is included
in a steam power generating plant. Cooling water enters an inlet distribution head
12 communicating with the entry to each tube 3.
[0030] An outlet conduit 11 receives cooling water from an outlet collection head 13 communicating
with the tubes 3 and discharges the cooling water. The outlet conduit 11 also communicates
with the recirculation system 6. The outlet conduit 11 may comprise a pipe, tunnel
or an open trough or flume. The illustration in Figure 1 is intended to be representative
of either. The cross-section of the outlet conduit 11 at Figure 1 may be either square
or circular. Commonly, an open trough or tunnel will have a rectangular cross-section,
and a pipe will have a circular cross-section.
[0031] Figures 2 and 3, which are partial cross-sectional illustrations of an elevation
and a plan respectively along Lines 2-2 and 3-3 of Figure 1 illustrate one form of
the interface between the outlet conduit 11 and the recirculation system 6. The interface
means 20 comprises a barrier 25 for intercepting flow in the outlet conduit 11 in
a manner described in further detail below and directing a portion thereof to a conduit
30 having an outlet 31 terminating in a deaeration tank 34. The deaeration tank 34
is of conventional construction including a liquid level controller 36 for controlling
water level in the tank 34 by controlling valve means 37 operating pressure means
38. The deaerating tank 34 is operated in a conventional manner. The pressure means
38 is operated in a conventional manner. The pressure means 38 which may supply negative
pressures such as a vacuum is operated to draw air off from the tank 34. In this manner,
air is removed from the flow that is to be returned through the remainder of the recirculation
system 6.
[0032] Within the aerating tank 34 is an inlet 40 to a conduit 41 which conducts water and
material entrained therein (such as tube cleaners 2) from the deaerating tank 34
pumped by a pump 43 to a conduit 44. A source 42 of make-up water is provided to provide
a sufficient stream into which to entrain, pressurize and reinject the tube cleaners
2. The conduit 44 has an outlet 45 for injecting tube cleaners 2 in the flow path
to the inlet 10 of the heat exchanger 1.
[0033] Referring to Figures 2 and 3, the interface means 20 is discussed in greater detail.
In accordance with this embodiment of the present invention, variable buoyancy tube
cleaners 2 are utilized which will have positive buoyancy upon reaching the outlet
manifold 4 and outlet 11. In the prior art systems wherein the exiting tube cleaners
have negative buoyancy, it is the standard practice to intercept the entire flow
in an outlet analogous to the outlet 11 to remove tube cleaners therefrom. In accordance
with the present invention, however, the barrier 25 is formed to provide skimmer means
positioned for intercepting a vertical extreme portion of flow in a hori zontal
component of the flow direction from the outlet collection head 13. The barrier 25
is preferably a straight, rectangularly shaped wall member. Where fitted into a circular
pipe, however, the barrier 25 may be a V-shaped barrier when viewed in a direction
normal to outlet flow and comprising first and second radial flanges. In the present
embodiment in which tube cleaners 2 are expected to float upon exiting from the outlet
collection head 13, the barrier 25 is positioned extending across a top portion of
the outlet 11. As used here, "top portion" contemplates a depth which corresponds
to the expected depth to which tube cleaners are expected to be encountered. The barrier
25 is preferably positioned a distance from the outlet collection head 13 such that
tube cleaners 2 will have an opportunity to float to the top of the water flow. It
is significant that the barrier 25 and outlet conduit 30 may be formed to provide
a minor portion, for example, as little as one or two percent of the outlet flow in
the outlet 11 to the recirculation system 6.
[0034] This proportioning provides for a number of highly beneficial results. The barrier
25 may be of solid construction, such as a solid piece of steel. The barrier may be
made at minimum cost to provide maximum strength. This is to be contrasted with extremely
expensive and complex screen systems of the prior art. A screen system is of necessity
difficult to provide in that a screen must be open enough to permit flow therethrough
and yet must be strong enough to withstand the differential pressure thereacross.
A screen also necessarily creates a back-pressure. Such a back-pressure is not produced
by the present barrier system in an open flume. The back-pressure produced in a closed
pipe embodiment is not significant since only a minority of the area of the cross-section
of the pipe need be blocked this is extremely significant since in a nominal embodiment
in an 800 megawatt power plant, for example, outlet flow in a nominal outlet pipe
11 may be 140,000 gallons per minute.
[0035] The barrier 25 preferably extends to a point at which the conduit 30 intersects the
outlet 11. From that point, the barrier 25 is angled with respect to the horizontal
component of flow in the pipe 11. As the tube cleaners 2 are carried along in the
flow and impact the barrier 25, the tube cleaners 2 are directed to the conduit 30.
The angle at which the barrier 25 is placed with respect to the flow may be, for example,
45°. An optimal angle may be selec ted as a function of the geometry or geometries
of the tube cleaners 2. As further described below, the tube cleaners may not necessarily
all be spherical. Further, different geometries of tube cleaners may be combined in
the flow. The optimum angle is a function of the combination of tube cleaners 2 provided
in the flow. One skilled in the art will know when the optimum angle is achieved
in that the maximum number of tube cleaners reach the conduit 30 after striking the
barrier 25 in a minimum time.
[0036] The conduit 30 receives a flow of water and tube cleaners 2 and provides the flow
to the deaeration tank 34. The pump 43 pumps flow therefrom. The tube cleaners 2 as
entrained in the flow are then injected from the outlet 45 into the stream entering
the inlet 10. Tube cleaners 2 are then dispersed throughout the inlet distribution
head 12. The pressurization of the tube cleaners 2 to substantial neutral buoyancy
is highly useful in that it helps assure a substantially even distribution of tube
cleaners to all the tubes 3 in the heat exchanger 4. Turbulence in the inlet distribution
head 12 further disperses the tube cleaners 2. In a nominal heat exchanger, the inlet
distribution head 12 may be as high as 20 feet to accommodate all 40,000 tubes. This
has resulted in prior art, conventional tube cleaning operations being relatively
ineffective as applied to the upper tubes.
[0037] The tubes cleaners 2 are forced under pressure through the tubes 3. The tube cleaners
rub thereagainst. Only a minimum amount of cleaning takes place on one pass. It is
contemplated that the tube cleaners 2 will be recirculated continuously through the
heat exchanger except during cleaning system outages.
[0038] Figures 4-17 are isometric illustrations of tube cleaners which are susceptible of
optimal use in the present embodiment. The common feature is that each tube cleaner
comprises a closed cell or closed cell material. The closed cell material is preferably
an elastomer. An example of a closed cell material is polyurethane foam. This is to
be contrasted with the common, open cell, sponge rubber tube cleaner of the prior
art. The optimal density of foam material will be dictated by the expected application.
For example, in the preferred embodiment, it is desired that a materials is selected
that is pressurized to neutral buoyancy at the average pressure expected to be encountered
at the entries to the tubes 3.
[0039] Neutral, or zero, buoyancy here is used to indicate a nominal, preselected degree
of buoyancy which in some embodiments will actually equal neutral buoyancy and in
other embodiments will closely approximate this value. Neutral buoyancy is achieved
when density of a tube cleaner 2 equals density of the surrounding water. The tube
cleaners 2 are designed to have a given density at a given pressure. This density
is the density of water expected to be encountered at entries to tubes 3. The water
density will vary, however, with temperature. Water is densest at 39.2°F (4°C). Also,
densities of individual tubes cleaners will vary within a group due to manufacturing
tolerances. The terminology neutral density may therefore also refer herein to a tube
cleaner 2 being in a group of tube cleaners whose average density will provide for
the nominal value of buoyancy referred to as neutral buoyancy. The range of values
of densities in the group may be minimized through manufacturing controls. Alternatively,
it may be desired to broaden the range of permissible densities. The objective sought
is equal distribution of tube cleaners 2 through the tubes 3.
[0040] The material is one that floats at the pressure expected in the outlet 11, e.g.
at ambient pressure. The examples in Figures 4-15 are not exhaustive. They are only
exemplary to teach those skilled in the art how to make many different forms of tube
cleaners, many of which will be constructed in accordance with the present invention.
[0041] Figures 4 and 5 illustrate closed cell elastomeric tube cleaners in a cubic and
spherical configuration respectively. Figure 5 is partially broken away to illustrate
interior structure. These tube cleaners may be made of rubber. The elastomer is of
the closed cell type. This is to be constrasted with open cell sponge rubber. Further,
for more severe cleaning requirements, as illustraed in Figure 5, carbon black or
other abrasive may be dispersed throughout the tube cleaner.
[0042] In accordance with the present invention, the tube cleaner may be cubic, as shown
in Figure 4. It has been found that in multiple recirculations of a tube cleaner 2,
points of the cube will be deformed to permit passage of a cubical tube cleaner through
a heat exchanger tube. One edge of the cube is selected to be slightly larger than
the inner diameter of a tube 3. Manufacture of cubical tube cleaners 2 is simplified
and less expensive compared to manufacture of the traditional spherical tube cleaners,
as shown in Figure 5 in cross-sectional form.
[0043] Figure 6 is illustrative of a tube cleaner 2 in a cubical configuration incorporating
flotation members 60, which may be, for example, polyurethane foam and an abrasive
or cleaning member 62 comprising the remainder of the tube cleaner. As illustrated
in Figure 7, a hollow tube could also be provided. Figure 8 illustrates another non-traditional
shape for a tube cleaner, namely, a cylinder. In the embodiment of Figure 8, elastomer
is formed as a right circular cylinder. Again, the diameter of the right circular
cylinder is selected to be slightly larger than the tube 3. The cylinders will tend
to orient themselves within the inlet distribution head 12 at the point of entry to
the tubes 3 for proper transport through the tubes. Figure 8a comprises a cylindrical
flotation member 60 having a smaller diameter than the cylinder of Figure 8 and having
cleaning members 62 mounted thereon. Cleaning members here and below may comprise
medium durometer elastomer.
[0044] Figure 9 is illustrative of a hollow spherical tube cleaner. The elastomeric material
may comprise the closed cell, compressible material for providing variable buoyancy.
Alternatively, the sphere itself may be compressed as a unit as opposed to collective
compression of the individual closed cells therein.
[0045] Figures 10 and 11 illustrate tube cleaners 2 having alternative methods to respond
to increases in pressure to decrease the buoyancy thereof, namely provision for limited
variable buoyancy. In Figure 10, the tube cleaner 2 comprises a hollow, spherical
body 70 having ports 71 communicating with an interior of the body 70. The ports
71 permit transmission of pressure from the exterior of the sphere 70 to the interior
thereof. Mounted within the interior of the body 70 is a membrane 72 surrounding
a core 73. Between the solid core 73 and the membrane 72 is a compressible fluid.
The compressible fluid may comprise inert gas or condensible gas. At atmospheric
pressure the membrane 72 expands to a first diameter dependent on the size of the
membrane itself and positively limited by the inner diameter of the hollow sphere
70. As pressure transmitted through the ports 71 increases, the diameter of the membrane
72 decreases. The maximum contraction is limited by the volume of the core 73. The
core 73 must be porous so as to permit compression of the gas housed within the membrane
72 into the core 73. A limit on the compression of the membrane 72 is provided. In
this manner, a form of tube cleaner 2 is provided having limited variable buoyancy.
Buoyancy of the tube cleaner 2 in this embodiment decreases as pressure thereon increases
until the membrane 72 is compressed to the size of the core 73. Thereafter, increase
in pressure does not decrease buoyancy. By proper proportioning of dimensions and
component densities, the tube cleaner 2 of the present embodiment can be constructed
such that the tube cleaner 2 will have neutral buoyancy at any pressure over a selected
threshold pressure, which threshold pressure can be one expected to be encountered
in the inlet distribution head 12 to the heat exchanger 1.
[0046] Another variable buoyancy tube cleaner 2 may be provided as in Figure 11, which is
an isometric view of a right circular cylinder embodiment, partially broken away.
A right circular cylinder 80 is provided having a port 81 communicating pressure to
a piston 82 housed therein defining an enclosed portion 83 enclosing a compressible
fluid as in the embodiment of Figure 10. A stop means 84 may be provided to limit
travel of the piston 82 and compression of the fluid in the portion 83. Once again,
a maximum density is provided for irrespective of pressure over a selected threshold
level.
[0047] Figure 12 is an isometric illustration of an embodiment in which a compressible flotation
mem ber 88 and a relatively incompressible cleaning member 89 affixed thereto by
fastening means 90 is provided. The flotation member 88 is shaped to fit for travel
through a tube 3. In the embodiment of Figure 12, the flotation member 88 comprises
a truncated spheriod having the annular member 89 mating to the truncated portion
thereof. The fastening means 90 extends through the center of the cleaning member
89 into the flotation member 88 along a diameter thereof. Edges of the outer diameter
of either annulus 89 may be rounded. Alternatively, they may be initially left square
for ease in manufacture and will be rounded upon progressing through repeated passes
through the heat exchanger tubes 3.
[0048] Figures 13 and 14 disclose alternative embodiments of the embodiment of Figure 8
in which a central opening is provided which decreases differential pressure across
each cleaning element 2. The central opening may comprise a right circular cylinder,
truncated cone or other convenient shape. Figure 15 further illustrates a central
body 60 surrounded by an abrasive annular member 62.
[0049] Figures 16 and 17 represent a special case of the above embodiments in which the
range of variability of buoyancy in response to pressure is zero. A flotation member
88 is provided which is substantially incompressible under expected pressures. The
flotation member 88 and cleaning member 89 are proportioned to provide for neutral
buoyancy. The cleaning member 89 is of an elastomer of high abrasion resistance
and high flex failure resistance, e.g. polyurethane. In the embodiment of Figure
16, the flotation member 88 may be bifurcated to abut opposite surfaces of the cleaning
member 89 which is mounted in a plane on a diameter of the member 88, e.g. as to resemble
the planet Saturn. To provide for the same result, the flotation member 88 may have
a groove formed in its circumference. The cleaning member 89 may be stretched over
the flotation member 88 and snap into place in the groove. The cleaning member 89
is supported in the flotation member 88 and has only an annular peripheral portion
projecting in a radial direction from the spheriod defined by the flotation member
88. In the embodiment of Figure 17, the flotation member 88 is a sphere, and the cleaning
member 89 is a deformable disc attached to and depending from the flotation member
88. The disc comprising the cleaning member 88 is deformable to form a convex surface
in the direction of travel. Both embodiments are oriented in each tube 3 by hydraulic
forces. Fastening means 92 maintain the members 88 and 89 in engagement. In Figure
17, the fastening means 92 is engaged to the flotation member 88 sufficiently tightly
to initiate the above-described cup-like deformation of the disc i.e., the cleaning
member 89. The fastening means 92 need not be a screw; it could comprise a molded
retaining means integral with the flotation member 88.
[0050] In both cases, the flotation member 88 has a longest dimension less than an inside
diameter of a tube 3 through which it is intended to travel and the cleaning member
89 has a greater diameter. The cleaning member 89 is sufficiently elastomeric such
that a side 91 seals thereof the inside diameter of a tube 3 and provides a wiping
motion of its periphery against the inside diameter as the tube cleaner 2 moves in
response to the pressure differential thereacross. The cleaning member 89 thus engages
the tubes in a cleaning relationship. The side 91 may initially be squared and eventually
become rounded due to wear.
[0051] The diameter of the cleaning member 89 in the embodiment of Figure 16 is chosen so
that the cleaning member 89 will be other than normal to an axis of a tube 3, illustrated
as axis A in Figure 16, and will assume differing orientations in successive passes.
Ideally, the tube cleaner 2 will rotate about the axis of the tube 3. In the embodiment
of Figure 17, greater deformability of the cleaning member 89 is provided for, and
the cleaning member 89 forms a cup upon entry into a tube 3. The material and the
diameter of the cleaning member 89 are selected so that the cup "wobbles" in its
travel through the tube 3 so that cleaning action is enhanced.
[0052] Figure 18 is a mechanical schematic illustration partially illustrating a further
embodiment of the system as illustrated in Figure 1. Elements in Figure 18 corresponding
to elements in Figure 1 are denoted by similar reference numerals with a prime notation.
In this embodiment as well, tube cleaners 2 are intercepted by skimmer means in a
horizontal component of direction of flow from an outlet and directed to recirculating
means. It is realized that the term "skimming" is most commonly utilized in connection
with removal from the top of a liquid body. Here, it is used to indicate removal from
a vertical extreme portion, which in the embodiment of Figure 18 happens to be a lower
vertical extremity, namely the bottom. Another form of skimming means for cleaner
retrieval from the bottom of the flow could comprise a settling basin. The difference
in buoyancy upon exiting from a heat exchanger from that upon entering a heat exchanger
is once again used for separating the tube cleaners 2 from the outlet flow and for
avoiding the need to intercept the entire outlet flow volume for the purpose of separation.
In the embodiment of Figure 18, however, the tube cleaner 2 utilized is an open
cell tube cleaner. The open cell tube cleaner 2 may be of known tube cleaning material
such as sponge rubber or other suitable operation. Suitable operation is that which
permits operation in accordance with the details described below.
[0053] Referring in greater detail to Figure 18, an interface 20 is provided at the outlet
11 which, once again, may be either an open flume or a closed pipe. In the present
embodiment, use of open cell tube cleaners 2 is contemplated. The tube cleaners 2
contain air upon entry into tubes 3. Air is expelled from tube cleaners 2 by reintroduction
of water into the cellular construction thereof under the differential pressure thereacross.
Upon exiting from the heat exchanger 1, the tube cleaners will sink. The direction
of travel will be in a horizontal direction and along the bottom of the outlet 11.
At the interface 20, a separator section 25 is formed such that tube cleaners 2 will
be positioned for being intercepted in the horizontal direction of flow by a barrier
means and diverted to a conduit 30 in a recirculation system 6. For example, a barrier
means 25 may comprise a vertical wall extending from a lower portion of the outlet
11. An inclined section 25a may be provided for permitting tube cleaners 2 to sink
below the level of the lower wall of the outlet 22 so that continuing in their horizontal
direction of travel they will impact the vertical wall portion 25.
[0054] From the conduit 30, the tube cleaners 2 travel to a dewatering tank 34. In the tank
34, the tube cleaners 2 are delivered to an inclined screen 93 for directing the tube
cleaners 2 to dewatering rollers 94. The screen 93 as illustrated in Figure 18, could
be either a conical screen having the rollers 94 positioned immediately below a central,
circular opening thereof. Alternatively, the screen 93 could comprise the V-shaped
intersection of planar surfaces within the contour of the tank 34, and the rollers
94 may be elongated, extending along a maximum dimension parallel to a diameter of
the tank 34. The tube cleaners 2 exit via the conduit 41 for pumping by the pump
43 to the return conduit 44 and injection into the inlet stream as in the embodiment
of Figure 1.
[0055] The porous tube cleaners 2 are partially dewatered, i.e., water is removed to a
preselected degree upon passage through the rollers 94. The tube cleaners 2 are not
completely saturated upon their entry into the inlet distribution head 12. The degree
to which the tube cleaners 2 are dewatered by the rollers 94 will be determinative
of its buoyancy upon entry into the inlet distribution head 12. As in the embodiment
of Figure 1, a neutral buoyancy is desired. This is because, in the presence of anticipated
turbulence, a more uniform distribution of the vertical positions of tube cleaners
2 upon entry into the tube bundle 3 is achieved.
[0056] In a further embodiment, the rollers 94a may be provided in place of rollers 94 as
shown in Figure 19. Two counter-rotating rollers are provided wherein the distance
between the two surfaces is variable. The diameter of each roller 94a varies with
distance along its axis of rotation. Consequently, the degree of dewatering of tube
cleaners 2 will vary with the axial position with respect to the rollers 94 at which
the tube cleaners 2 passed therethrough. Consequently, tube cleaners 2 will enter
the inlet distribution head 12 having a distribution of buoyancies. This will aid
the vertical distribution of tube cleaners 2 prior to entry into the tubes 3 and yield
a more even dispersion. It is to be remembered that a nominal heat exchanger 1 may
be 20 feet in height. In the common, prior art embodiment, better cleaning is achieved
in the lower tubes and poor or no cleaning is achieved in the upper tubes.
[0057] Further in accordance with an alternative form of the present invention, the tube
cleaners 2 may be selected to have a longest dimension which is less than the inside
diameter of a tube in the bundle 3. In the case of the spherical tube cleaner 2, this
longest dimension would be a diameter of tube cleaner. For the sake of comprehensiveness
in terminology, in the present description, the term diameter is used to mean the
longest dimension of a tube cleaner 2, whether or not it is spherical. The present
invention further comprises the method of injecting tube cleaners 2 for recirculation,
which tube cleaners 2 have diameters smaller than the inner diameters of tubes in
the bundle 3. Whereas in the typical prior art embodiments discussed, sponge rubber
tube cleaners are provided having a diameter slightly larger so that cleaning is achieved
by rubbing action, an embodiment of the pressent invention contemplates cleaning
due to impact of tube cleaners 2 against inner surfaces. It is contem plated that
turbulence will propel tube cleaners 2 against the surfaces of the tubes in the bundle
3. Tube cleaners 2 such as in the embodiment of Figure 5 may be provided of sufficient
compressibility to have variable density in accordance with the above teachings while
having sufficient hardness to achieve a cleaning effect. It is to be remembered that
in the abrasive embodiment or in the non-abrasive embodiment, only a highly limited
amount of cleaning need to achieved on each pass of tube cleaners 2 through the tube
bundle 3 since in a typical continuous cleaning operation there will be for example
ten thousand passes of tube cleaners 2 through a tube 3 per year.
[0058] What is thus provided by the present invention are novel tube cleaners of variable
density or of limited variable density, novel neutral buoyancy tube cleaners, novel
recirculation systems for utilizing either open cell or closed cell variable density
tube cleaners and a system and method of utilizing tube cleaners in a novel system.
1. A system for circulating tube cleaners through inside diameters in a bank of heat
exchange tubes, said bank including an inlet means and an outlet means positioned
for intercepting a vertical extreme portion of flow in a horizontal component of
direction from said outlet means, conduit means of directing a portion of the flow
to recirculating means in a recirculating flow path, said skimmer means being positioned
for directing the intercepted portion of the flow and the tube cleaners therein to
the conduit means, and tube cleaner collecting means, means providing recirculating
fluid into the recirculating flow path for transporting the tube cleaners for reinjection,
and an outlet means connected for reinjecting said tube cleaners from said recirculating
flow path to an inlet to said inlet means.
2. A system according to claim 1 wherein said tube cleaner collecting and reinjection
means comprises means for collecting tube cleaners at a pressure less than that which
pressurizes a tube cleaner for use in the system to neutral buoyancy and means for
delivering said tube cleaners from said collecting means to said reinjection means
and wherein said reinjection means comprises a reinjection flow source for entraining
said cleaning elements into said reinjection flow under pressure.
3. A system according to claim 2 wherein the flow from said outlet means is provided
in means opened to atmospheric pressure and said skimmer means is positioned at a
vertically upper portion of the flow.
4. A system according to claim 3 wherein said skimmer member comprises a vertical
wall extending across the outlet flow in a horizontal direction and extending to a
depth therein at least equal to the vertical dimension of a cleaning element.
5. A system according to claim 4 wherein said barrier is disposed at an angle to the
horizontal direction of flow at a preselected angle to provide a preselected direction
of said tube cleaners in a direction normal to the direction of flow.
6. A system according to claim 4 wherein said conduit means are positioned to receive
tube cleaners deflected by said barrier means and wherein said barrier means are proportioned
to direct a minor percentage of the flow from said outlet means to the recirculating
flow path.
7. A system according to claim 6 wherein said collecting means further comprises a
deaeration chamber for separating entrained air from recirculation water, and wherein
said means for providing recirculating fluid communicates with said deaeration chamber.
8. A system according to either of claims 1 or 7 further comprising closed cell cleaning
elements of variable buoyancy, the compressibility of said cleaning elements being
selected in proportion to said system such that said cleaning elements have positive
buoyancy at ambient pressure and neutral buoyancy at the pressure prevailing in the
inlet means at entry to the tubes in said bank of heat exchange tubes.
9. A system according to claim 1 wherein said cleaning element collection means comprises
means for collecting cleaning elements having negative buoyancy, means for delivering
said cleaning elements from said collecting means to said reinjection means.
10. A system according to claim 9 wherein said barrier means comprises means in a
vertically lower portion of the outlet flow from said outlet means for providing a
path for tube cleaners having negative buoyancy directed toward a barrier, and barrier
means intercepting said tube cleaners and directing the tube cleaners to said conduit,
said conduit extending therebelow.
11. A system according to claim 10 wherein said collecting means comprises dewatering
means for removing water from tube cleaners, said dewatering means being proportioned
with respect to the tube cleaners and with respect to said means for reinjecting such
that water will be removed from tube cleaners to an amount such that the tube cleaners
will reach a substantially neutral buoyancy at the entrance to tubes in the bank
of heat exchange tubes.
12. A system according to claim 11 wherein said dewatering means are provided for
dewatering the tube cleaners substantially equally.
13. A system according to claim 11 wherein said dewatering means are proportioned
to dewater tube cleaners to varying degrees such that tube cleaners are returned to
the inlet means having a range of buoyancy.
14. A system according to any one of claims 1, 9 or 11, further comrpising open cell
tube cleaners.
15. A tube cleaner for recirculation in a tube bank comprising a closed cell resilient
tube cleaner formed to contact and increase in density under pressure.
16. A tube cleaner according to claim 15 comprising an elastomer.
17. A tube cleaner according to claim 16 formed substantially as a sphere.
18. A tube cleaner according to claim 16 formed substantially as a cube.
19. A tube cleaner according to claim 16 further comprising abrasive dispersed throughout
said tube cleaner.
20. A tube cleaner according to claim 16 comprising a foam body providing variable
buoyancy and a cleaning portion of fixed buoyancy affixed thereto.
21. A tube cleaner according to claim 20 wherein said foam portion comprises a cylinder
and said cleaning portion comprises a medium durometer elastomer affixed thereto.
22. A tube cleaner according to claim 21 comprising substantially congruent disks
affixed to opposite bases of said cylinder.
23. A tube cleaner according to claim 21 comprising a ring member symetrical with
respect to an axis of said cylinder and lying at a plane at an oblique angle thereto.
24. A tube cleaner according to claim 15 comprising a solid cleaning element housing
enclosed gas and means for responding to pressure on said gas for increasing the density
of said tube cleaner.
25. A tube cleaner according to claim 24 wherein said tube cleaner houses a piston
for compressng gas in response to pressure applied to said piston and including stop
means whereby a maximum limit is provided to the decrease in buoyancy of the tube
cleaner.
26. A tube cleaner according to claim 24 comprising a solid outer housing, a pressure
port communication to an interior of said housing, a membrane within the interior
and housing gas and a porous solid member within said membrane for limiting the maximum
compression thereof.
27. A tube cleaner according to claim 15 comprising a flotation member defining an
oblate spheroid contour and an annular cleaning disk in a plane congruent with a major
diameter thereof.
28. A tube cleaner according to claim 15 comprising a spheroid flotation member and
a cleaning member having a conical contour having a pinnacle substantially intersecting
the center of the sphere and extending beyond a radius thereof.
29. A method for cleaning inside diameters in a bank of heat exchange tubes comprising
receiving variable buoyancy tube cleaners in a recirculating flow path at a first
pressure and buoyancy, changing the buoyancy of said tube cleaners and reinjecting
the tube cleaners into a reinjection flow path under pressure and pressurizing said
tube cleaners to a substantially neutral buoyancy.
30. A method according to claim 29 comprising collecting closed cell tube cleaners,
communicating the outlet of said bank of heat exchange tubes with a pressure at which
said closed cell tube cleaners have positive buoyancy, intercepting said tube cleaners
in a vertical extreme portion of flow in a horizontal component of direction, directing
the tube cleaners through a recirculation path, and pressurizing said tube cleaners
for injection to an inlet to said bank of heat exchange tubes at substantially neutral
buoyancy.
31. A method according to claim 29 comprising intercepting open-cell tube cleaners
having a negative buoyancy, directing said tube cleaners to a recirculation path,
dewatering said tube cleaners to a degree such that upon reinjection into an inlet
flow to the bank of heat exchange tubes said tube cleaners will have a substantially
neutral buoyancy.
32. A method according to claim 30 wherein the step of dewatering comprises dewatering
various of the tube cleaners to differing degrees whereby a range of buoyancies is
provided at the entrance to tubes in the bank of heat exchange tubes.
33. A method according to any one of claims 29, 30 or 31, comprising providing tube
cleaners having a diameter less than an inside diameter of tubes in the bank of heat
exchange tubes and injecting said tube cleaners for circulation through the bank of
heat exchanges tubes.
34. A tube cleaner for cleaning the inside diameter of a tube, said tube cleaner comprising
a cleaning member having negative buoyancy and a flotation member having negative
buoyancy, said cleaning member and said flotation member being proportioned to provide
neutral buoyancy of said tube cleaner, means maintaining said flotation member to
said cleaning member, said cleaning member being dimensioned for forming a seal with
the tube whereby said cleaning member engages the tube in a sealing relationship,
is oriented by hydraulic force and is moved through the tube in response to pressure
differential thereacross.
35. A tube cleaner according to claim 34 wherein said flotation member comprises portions
defining a spheroid and surrounding said cleaning component and whereby said cleaning
member comprises a disc having an annular peripheral portion extending radially beyond
said flotation member.
36. A tube cleaner according to claim 35 wherein said cleaning member has a diameter
proportioned with respect to the tube inside diameter such that said cleaning member
is disposed at an angle other than perpendicular to an axis of the tube and is positioned
for rotation about the axis.
37. A tube cleaner according to claim 34 wherein said cleaning member comprises a
disc depending from said flotation member of a diameter for forming a cup convex
in the direction of travel when said tube cleaner is positioned in the tube.
38. A tube cleaner according to claim 37 wherein said means maintaining said cleaning
member to said flotation member comprises a fastener extending through said cleaning
member and into said buoyancy member and tightened sufficiently to induce deformation
of said cleaning member.
39. A tube cleaner according to any one of claims 34 through 38 wherein said cleaning
member comprises elastomer having abrasive dispersed therethrough.
40. In a system for circulating tube cleaners through inside diameters of a bank of
heat exchange tubes and including inlet means, outlet means, tube cleaner collection
means, means for providing recirculating fluid into a recirculating flow path, and
injection means for reinjecting said tube cleaners into said inlet means, the improvement
comprising skimmer means adapted for diverting substantially all tube cleaners in
the flow from said outlet means while intercepting a minor portion only of said flow.
41. The system of claim 40 wherein said skimmer means is positioned to interrupt flow
in a preselected vertical extreme of said flow.