HEAT EXCHANGER AND AIR CONDITIONER EQUIPPED WITH SAME
The heat exchanger (1) comprises: two header pipes (2),(3) arranged in parallel with an interval therebetween; a plurality of flat tubes (4) which are arranged between the header pipes and which place coolant paths (5) provided therein in communication with the interior of the header pipes; a plurality of fins (6) attached to the flat surface of each flat tube; and side sheets (10U), (10D) attached to an outside of the fins (6aU), (6aD), which are positioned farthest outward among the plurality of fins. The side sheet (10D) positioned in the bottom part of the heat exchanger (1) has a plurality of notches (11) formed at intervals from each other on the edge of the side where condensed water collects in the heat exchanger (1). The notches are each provided with a width sufficient for covering the interval pitch (P) of the fin by several pitch lengths.
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The present invention relates to a side-flow type parallel-flow heat exchanger and an air conditioner equipped with the same.
BACKGROUND ARTA parallel-flow heat exchanger has a configuration in which a plurality of flat tubes are arranged between a plurality of header pipes such that a plurality of refrigerant passages in the flat tubes communicate with interiors of the header pipes, and fins such as corrugated fins are disposed between the flat tubes. Such a parallel-flow heat exchanger is widely used in vehicle air conditioners, outdoor units of air conditioners for buildings, and so on.
In the parallel-flow heat exchanger, the corrugated fins may be installed exclusively between the flat tubes or may be mounted therebetween and also to an outward facing surface of each outermost positioned one of the plurality of flat tubes. Examples of the latter case can be seen in Patent Documents 1 to 3.
A heat exchanger described in Patent Document 1 is a parallel-flow heat exchanger in which flat tubes are arranged in horizontal rows. In this heat exchanger, corrugated fins are mounted also to an outward facing flat surface of each outermost one of the flat tubes, and a side plate for fin protection is disposed on an outside of each outermost one of the corrugated fins.
A heat exchanger described in Patent Document 2 also is a parallel-flow heat exchanger in which flat tubes are arranged in horizontal rows. In this heat exchanger, corrugated fins are mounted also to an outward facing flat surface of each outermost one of the flat tubes, and a side plate for reinforcing a core portion composed of the flat tubes and the corrugated fins, which are alternately layered on each other, is disposed on an outside of each outermost one of the corrugated fins.
A heat exchanger described in Patent Document 3 also is a parallel-flow heat exchanger in which flat tubes are arranged in horizontal rows. In this heat exchanger, a side sheet is brazed to an exterior of one of the corrugated fins at each of both ends of the heat exchanger.
In a case where a heat exchanger is used as an evaporator, moisture in the atmosphere condenses on a cooled surface of the heat exchanger, and thus condensate water is formed. In a side-flow type parallel-flow heat exchanger, if condensate water is accumulated on surfaces of flat tubes or of corrugated fins, an area of an air flow passage is narrowed by the water, so that heat exchange performance is deteriorated. For this reason, it is required that a side-flow type parallel-flow heat exchanger be configured to allow condensate water to be quickly drained, thereby preventing it from being accumulated therein.
When an air temperature is low, condensate water turns into frost on a surface of a heat exchanger. Such frost may even turn into ice. In this specification, the term “condensate water” is intended to encompass so-called defrosted water that is water resulting from melting of such frost or ice.
When, as in the configurations described in the above patent documents, a parallel-flow heat exchanger including a side sheet provided on an outside of each outermost fin is used by adopting a so-called side-flow method in which header pipes are arranged in perpendicular rows, and flat tubes are arranged in horizontal rows, there occurs a problem that condensate water is held by a lower-side one of the side sheets. Patent Documents 4 and 5 disclose technical ideas for solving this problem.
In a heat exchanger described in Patent Document 4, when seen from below, an outermost corrugated fin positioned at a lower portion is at least partly exposed to have an exposed portion. The exposed portion is made to emerge by reducing a width of a side plate positioned on an outside of this outermost corrugated fin.
In a heat exchanger described in Patent Document 5, water drainage holes for draining condensate water are provided through a side plate as a bottom surface plate. Through the lower-side side plate, the water drainage holes are provided in such a number and size as not to deteriorate mechanical strength of the side plate.
LIST OF CITATIONS Patent Literature
- Patent Document 1: JP-A-H5-79788
- Patent Document 2: JP-A-2006-64194
- Patent Document 3: JP-A-2007-139376
- Patent Document 4: JP-A-2010-249388
- Patent Document 5: JP-A-S61-223465
It is an object of the present invention to provide, in a side-flow type parallel-flow heat exchanger, a structure capable of draining condensate water from a lower-side outermost fin as quickly as possible.
Solution to the ProblemA side-flow type parallel-flow heat exchanger according to the present invention includes: a plurality of header pipes that are arranged parallel to each other at an interval therebetween; a plurality of flat tubes that are arranged between the plurality of header pipes and each have therein a refrigerant passage communicating with interiors of the plurality of header pipes; a plurality of fins that are mounted to flat surfaces of the plurality of flat tubes; and a side sheet that is attached to an outside of each outermost positioned one of the plurality of fins. One of the side sheets, which is positioned at a lower portion of said heat exchanger, is provided, at an edge thereof on a condensate water gathering side in said heat exchanger, with a plurality of notches formed at intervals from each other, and each of the notches has a width extending over a length plural times a length of an interval pitch of the fins.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, the notches have a shape having an angle of less than 180° inside from the edge of the one of the side sheets.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, the notches are tapered from the edge of the one of the side sheets.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, the one of the side sheets is provided, at an edge thereof on a side opposite to the condensate water gathering side, with a plurality of notches formed at intervals from each other, and each of the notches has a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch of the fins.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, the notches formed in the one of the side sheets on the condensate water gathering side or the notches formed in the one of the side sheets on the side opposite to the condensate water gathering side have a depth exceeding half a depth of the one of the side sheets.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, the notches formed on the condensate water gathering side and the notches formed on the side opposite to the condensate water gathering side are arranged so as to be mutually staggered.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, a part of said heat exchanger can be formed into a curved portion by bending, and a part of the one of the side sheets, which is to be subjected to the bending, is provided, at an edge thereof that is to be convex after the bending, with a plurality of slits formed by cutting at intervals from each other.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, the one of the side sheets is provided, at an edge thereof that is to be concave after bending, with a plurality of the notches that have a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch of the fins and are formed at intervals from each other.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, the one of the side sheets has a plurality of through holes formed at intervals from each other at portions thereof other than portions where the notches are formed.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, each of the through holes is formed to have a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch of the fins.
In the heat exchanger configured as above, preferably, in a depth direction, the one of the side sheets has a width smaller than a width of the fins, and the fins are exposed to an outside of the one of the side sheets on each of the condensate water gathering side and a side opposite to the condensate water gathering side.
An air conditioner according to the present invention includes the heat exchanger of any one of the above-described configurations, and the heat exchanger is incorporated in an outdoor unit or an indoor unit of the air conditioner.
Advantageous Effects of the InventionAccording to the present invention, even if condensate water is formed on an outermost fin positioned at a lower portion of a heat exchanger, or condensate water formed at an upper part of the heat exchanger flows down to the lower portion of the heat exchanger, such condensate water quickly drips down, i.e. is quickly drained.
With reference to the appended drawings, the following describes embodiments of the present invention.
The header pipes 2 and 3, the flat tubes 4, and the fins 6 are all made of a metal having good thermal conductivity, such as aluminum. The flat tubes 4 are fixed to the header pipes 2 and 3 by brazing or welding, and the fins 6 are fixed to the flat tubes 4 by brazing or welding.
The fins 6 are disposed between the flat tubes 4 such that each of the fins 6 is fixed at both of its upper and lower ends to the flat surfaces of each pair of adjacent upper and lower ones of the flat tubes 4, respectively. Naturally, a fin disposed on an outward facing flat surface of each outermost (uppermost or lowermost) positioned one of the plurality of flat tubes 4 arranged in vertical rows is fixed only at one of its upper and lower ends to the flat surface of the each tube. Henceforth, such a fin is referred to as an outermost fin. An outermost fin positioned at an upper portion of the heat exchanger 1 is indicated by a reference symbol 6aU, and an outermost fin positioned at a lower portion of the heat exchanger 1 is indicated by a reference symbol 6aD.
A side sheet 10U is disposed on an outside of the outermost fin 6aU, and a side sheet 10D is disposed on an outside of the outermost fin 6aD. The side sheets 10U and 10D are made of a metal sheet such as of aluminum and fixed to the outermost fins 6aU and 6aD, respectively, by brazing or welding.
The heat exchanger 1 is of a side-flow type, and only the header pipe 3 is provided with refrigerant gates 7 and 8. In the header pipe 3, two partition plates 9a and 9c are provided at an interval therebetween in a vertical direction, and in the header pipe 2, a partition plate 9b is provided at a height intermediate between heights at which the partition plates 9a and 9c are provided, respectively.
In a case where the heat exchanger 1 is used as an evaporator, a refrigerant flows in through the lower-side refrigerant gate 7 as shown by a solid line arrow in
In a case where the heat exchanger 1 is used as a condenser, a flow direction of a refrigerant is reversed. That is, a refrigerant enters the header pipe 3 through the refrigerant gate 8 as shown by a dotted line arrow in
The heat exchanger 1 is not limited in configuration to the above-described one. A configuration is also possible in which both of the header pipes 2 and 3 are provided with a refrigerant gate. Another configuration is also possible in which no partition plates are provided in the header pipes 2 and 3.
In a case where the heat exchanger 1 is used as an evaporator, moisture in the atmosphere condenses on a cooled surface of the heat exchanger 1, and thus condensate water is fowled. The intended meaning of “condensate water” is as described earlier. In a parallel-flow heat exchanger such as the heat exchanger 1, if condensate water is accumulated on surfaces of flat tubes or of fins, a sectional area of an air flow passage is narrowed by the water, so that heat exchange performance is deteriorated. In addition, since the heat exchanger 1 is of the side-flow type, condensate water formed on an upper one of flat tubes 4 or of fins 6 flows therefrom sequentially down to the lower ones of the flat tubes 4 or of the fins 6, and an outermost fin 6aD, therefore, is a place where accumulation of condensate water is most likely to occur.
Accumulated condensate water narrows an area of an air flow passage of the heat exchanger 1 and thus hinders ventilation, so that heat exchange performance is deteriorated. Furthermore, in a case where the heat exchanger 1 is incorporated in an outdoor unit of an air conditioner, with a drop of an outside air temperature to a freezing point or lower, condensate water may freeze to cause damage to the heat exchanger 1. For this reason, it is required that condensate water formed in the heat exchanger 1 be drained as quickly as possible.
In the present invention, in order to solve the above-described problem, a side sheet 10D positioned at the lower portion of the heat exchanger 1 is configured as follows. That is, the side sheet 10D is provided, at an edge thereof on a condensate water gathering side in the heat exchanger 1, with a plurality of notches 11 formed at intervals from each other.
In the case where the heat exchanger 1 is incorporated in an outdoor unit of an air conditioner, condensate water gathers on a windward side of the heat exchanger 1. This is for the following reason. That is, in an outdoor unit, the heat exchanger 1 is installed in a state of standing substantially upright without being tilted. In a case where the heat exchanger 1 is used as an evaporator (as in, for example, an air-warming operation), heat exchange is performed more actively on a windward side than on a leeward side, and thus condensate water is accumulated on the windward side. Hence, the windward side is a condensate water gathering side.
The heat exchanger 1 is designed to be incorporated in an outdoor unit of an air conditioner and, as shown in
Preferably, the individual notches 11 have a shape having an angle of less than 180° inside the side sheet 10D from the edge of the side sheet 10D and are tapered from the edge of the side sheet 10D. In the embodiment, as a shape satisfying these conditions, a V shape is selectively adopted. As shown in
Since the notches 11 are tapered from the edge of the side sheet 10D, as shown by arrows in
The notches 11 in the present invention are not limited in shape to a V shape. Any of various shapes exemplarily shown in
Notches 11 shown in
Notches 11 shown in
Notches 11 shown in
Notches 11 shown in
No matter which shape the notches 11 have among the shapes shown in
The side sheet 10D is provided, also at an edge thereof on a side opposite to the condensate water gathering side in the heat exchanger 1, with a plurality of notches 12 formed at intervals from each other. That is, the side sheet 10D has notches formed at the edges of both sides thereof. In each of
In the embodiment shown in
As described above, in the case where the heat exchanger 1 is incorporated in an outdoor unit of an air conditioner, the side sheet 10D is provided, also at the edge thereof on the side (leeward side) opposite to the condensate water gathering side (windward side) in the heat exchanger 1, with the notches 12 and, therefore, has notches fainted at the edges of both sides thereof. This further enhances a condensate water drainage capability of the side sheet 10D, and thus condensate water at the outermost fin 6aD can be quickly drained.
While this embodiment adopts a configuration in which the side sheet 10D is provided with notches at the edge thereof on the condensate water gathering side and at the edge thereof on the side opposite thereto in the heat exchanger 1, in other words, a configuration in which the side sheet 10D has notches formed at the edges of both sides thereof, a configuration also may be adopted in which the side sheet 10D has notches formed only at the edge thereof on the condensate water gathering side.
The notches 11 and 12 may have a size increased to such an extent as to have respective depths exceeding half a depth of the side sheet 10D. With this configuration, the side sheet 10D has a shape shown in
While in
The side sheet 10D has through holes 13 formed at portions thereof other than portions where the notches 11 and 12 are formed. In the embodiment, at positions between the notches 11 and the notches 12, a plurality of the through holes 13 are formed at intervals from each other. The through holes 13 have a shape of an elongated circle (racetrack circle) whose longitudinal axis is aligned with a length direction of the flat tubes 4 and, as shown in
Since the through holes 13 are present, drainage of condensate water accumulated at the outermost fin 6aD is even further enhanced.
The through holes 13 are not limited in shape to an elongated circular shape. Various shapes such as an elliptical shape shown in
Preferred as the shape of the through holes 13 is not only a non-angular shape such as an elongated circular shape or an elliptical shape. A shape having an angle of less than 180° also is preferred as the shape of the through holes 13.
For example, in a case of having a rectangular shape shown in
With the through holes 13 shaped to have an angle of less than 180° as in the above-described shapes, condensate water is guided toward the angle where flows of the water join together to form a large water droplet, which then drips down. Thus, condensate water is quickly drained.
It is not necessarily required that the though holes 13 have a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch P of the fins 6. Setting the through holes 13 to have a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch P of the fins 6, however, allows a large amount of condensate water to collect and thus can expedite drainage of the water.
A side sheet 10D shown in
A comparison between a width of the outermost fin 6aD in a depth direction thereof, namely, an air-passing direction and a width of the side sheet 10D in the same direction indicates that the width of the side sheet 10D is made smaller than the width of the outermost fin 6aD. Consequently, as shown in
As described earlier, the heat exchanger 1 has one curved portion 1a at some point along its length, thus having a substantially L-shaped planar shape. After the heat exchanger 1 is formed by using the flat tubes 4 of a linear shape, the curved portion 1a is formed by bending the heat exchanger 1, and this process of bending can be utilized also to form the notches 11.
As shown in a rectangular framed area at a lower portion of
The side sheet 10D is provided with the notches 12 at an edge thereof on a side that is to be concave after bending. In consideration of the fact that bending causes the notches 12 to be reduced in open angle, in order that, even in such a state, the notches 12 will have an open angle equal to that thereof at a non-bent portion of the side sheet 10D, i.e. the notches 12 will have a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch P of the fins 6, the notches 12 are set to have a V shape having a wide pre-bending angle.
The above-described heat exchanger 1 can be incorporated in an outdoor unit or an indoor unit of a separate type air conditioner.
An outdoor unit 20 shown in
In the housing 20a, a heat exchanger 1 having an L-shaped thermal plane is disposed on an immediately inner side relative to the back-face air intake port 22 and the side-face air intake port 23. A blower 24 is disposed between the heat exchanger 1 and the exhaust port 21 in order to forcibly cause heat exchange between the heat exchanger 1 and outdoor air. The blower 24 is formed by combining an electric motor 24a with a propeller fan 24b. In the housing 20a, on an inner surface of the front face 20F, a bell mouth 25 is fitted so as to surround the propeller fan 24b for improved blowing efficiency. The housing 20a includes a space on an inner side relative to the right side face 20R, which is isolated by a partition wall 26 from an air flow flowing from the back-face air intake port 22 to the exhaust port 21, and a compressor 27 is accommodated in this space.
Condensate water formed in the heat exchanger 1 of the outdoor unit 20 narrows an area of an air flow passage, so that heat exchange performance is deteriorated. Moreover, in a cold climate environment where an outside air temperature stays below the freezing point, such condensate water may even freeze to cause damage to the heat exchanger 1. Thus, in the outdoor unit 20, drainage of condensate water from the heat exchanger 1 is a crucial problem.
For the reason described earlier, in the outdoor unit 20, condensate water gathers on a windward side of the heat exchanger 1. Condensate water formed on the windward side rarely flows over to a leeward side but directly reaches a lower portion of the heat exchanger 1 on the windward side. When an outside air temperature is low, condensate water freezes to the heat exchanger 1 in the form of frost. An increased amount of frost necessitates a defrosting operation. During the defrosting operation, the blower 24 is stopped from operating, and thus water resulting from melting of the frost flows mainly downward to be accumulated due to gravity without being affected by wind. For this reason, the side sheet 10D at a lower portion of the heat exchanger 1 is formed to have the configuration of the present invention, so that condensate water is quickly drained, and this can reduce detrimental effects caused by accumulation of condensate water.
That is, the side sheet 10D attached to an outside of the outermost fin 6aD is provided, at the edge thereof on a condensate water gathering side, with the plurality of notches 11 formed at intervals from each other. Each of the notches 11 has a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch of the fins. By the configuration described above, assuming that condensate water is formed on the outermost fin 6aD positioned at the lower portion of the heat exchanger 1, or that condensate water formed at an upper part of the heat exchanger 1 flows down to the outermost fin 6aD, the condensate water is drawn deep into each of the notches 11 to collect and thus quickly drips down, i.e. is drained. This can prevent a situation in which condensate water is accumulated at the outermost fin 6aD positioned at the lower portion of the heat exchanger 1, so that a ventilation characteristic is impaired to deteriorate heat exchange performance.
The heat exchanger 1 according to the present invention can be used as a constituent component of the heat exchanger 106 of the indoor unit. The heat exchanger 106 is composed of three heat exchangers 106A, 106B, and 106C arranged in the shape of a roof covering the blower 108, and any one or all of the heat exchangers 106A, 106B, and 106C can be constituted by the heat exchanger 1.
In a case where the heat exchanger 1 according to the present invention is used as a constituent component of the heat exchanger 106 of the indoor unit, condensate water gathers on a surface of the heat exchanger 1 on a leeward side thereof that may also be a lower surface side thereof depending on a posture of the heat exchanger 1. Through the use of the heat exchanger 1 according to the present invention, condensate water, even if formed, can be quickly drained, and thus it is possible to reduce a phenomenon in which condensate water drips over the cross-flow fan 108a by which it is splashed.
The foregoing has described the embodiments of the present invention. The present invention, however, is not limited in scope thereto and can be implemented in variously modified forms within the spirit of the invention.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITYThe present invention is applicable to a side-flow type parallel-flow heat exchanger and an integrated air conditioner equipped with the same.
LIST OF REFERENCE SYMBOLS
-
- 1 heat exchanger
- 2, 3 header pipe
- 4 flat tube
- 5 refrigerant passage
- 6 fin
- 6aU, 6aD outermost fin
- 10U, 10D side sheet
- 11, 12 notch
- 13 through hole
- 20 outdoor unit
- 110 outdoor unit
- 120 indoor unit
Claims
1. A side-flow type parallel-flow heat exchanger, comprising:
- a plurality of header pipes that are arranged parallel to each other at an interval therebetween;
- a plurality of flat tubes that are arranged between the plurality of header pipes and each have therein a refrigerant passage communicating with interiors of the plurality of header pipes;
- a plurality of fins that are mounted to flat surfaces of the plurality of flat tubes; and
- a side sheet that is attached to an outside of each outermost positioned one of the plurality of fins,
- wherein
- one of the side sheets, which is positioned at a lower portion of said heat exchanger, is provided, at an edge thereof on a condensate water gathering side in said heat exchanger, with a plurality of notches formed at intervals from each other, and
- each of the notches has a width extending over a length plural times a length of an interval pitch of the fins.
2. The heat exchanger according to claim 1, wherein
- the notches have a shape having an angle of less than 180° inside from the edge of the one of the side sheets.
3. The heat exchanger according to claim 2, wherein
- the notches are tapered from the edge of the one of the side sheets.
4. The heat exchanger according to claim 3, wherein
- the one of the side sheets is provided, at an edge thereof on a side opposite to the condensate water gathering side, with a plurality of notches formed at intervals from each other, and
- each of the notches has a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch of the fins.
5. The heat exchanger according to claim 4, wherein
- the notches formed in the one of the side sheets on the condensate water gathering side or the notches formed in the one of the side sheets on the side opposite to the condensate water gathering side have a depth exceeding half a depth of the one of the side sheets.
6. The heat exchanger according to claim 4, wherein
- the notches formed on the condensate water gathering side and the notches formed on the side opposite to the condensate water gathering side are arranged so as to be mutually staggered.
7. The heat exchanger according to claim 1, wherein
- a part of said heat exchanger can be formed into a curved portion by bending, and a part of the one of the side sheets, which is to be subjected to the bending, is provided, at an edge thereof that is to be convex after the bending, with a plurality of slits formed by cutting at intervals from each other.
8. The heat exchanger according to claim 7, wherein
- the one of the side sheets is provided, at an edge thereof that is to be concave after bending, with a plurality of the notches that have a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch of the fins and are formed at intervals from each other.
9. The heat exchanger according to claim 1, wherein
- the one of the side sheets has a plurality of through holes formed at intervals from each other at portions thereof other than portions where the notches are formed.
10. The heat exchanger according to claim 9, wherein
- each of the through holes is formed to have a width extending over a length plural times a length of the interval pitch of the fins.
11. The heat exchanger according to claim 1, wherein
- in a depth direction, the one of the side sheets has a width smaller than a width of the fins, and the fins are exposed to an outside of the one of the side sheets on each of the condensate water gathering side and a side opposite to the condensate water gathering side.
12. An air conditioner comprising the heat exchanger according to claim 1,
- wherein the heat exchanger is incorporated in an outdoor unit or an indoor unit of said air conditioner.
Type: Application
Filed: Nov 11, 2011
Publication Date: Sep 19, 2013
Applicant: SHARP KABUSHIKI KAISHA (Osaka-shi, Osaka)
Inventors: Satoshi Hamaguchi (Osaka-shi), Madoka Ueno (Osaka-shi)
Application Number: 13/990,100
International Classification: F28D 1/053 (20060101); F28F 1/04 (20060101); F28F 1/30 (20060101);