US20040055300A1 - Rankine cycle generation of electricity - Google Patents
Rankine cycle generation of electricity Download PDFInfo
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- US20040055300A1 US20040055300A1 US10/667,099 US66709903A US2004055300A1 US 20040055300 A1 US20040055300 A1 US 20040055300A1 US 66709903 A US66709903 A US 66709903A US 2004055300 A1 US2004055300 A1 US 2004055300A1
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- Prior art keywords
- lobe
- gas
- rankine cycle
- electricity
- heat exchanger
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F01—MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
- F01C—ROTARY-PISTON OR OSCILLATING-PISTON MACHINES OR ENGINES
- F01C3/00—Rotary-piston machines or engines with non-parallel axes of movement of co-operating members
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F01—MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
- F01C—ROTARY-PISTON OR OSCILLATING-PISTON MACHINES OR ENGINES
- F01C1/00—Rotary-piston machines or engines
- F01C1/08—Rotary-piston machines or engines of intermeshing engagement type, i.e. with engagement of co- operating members similar to that of toothed gearing
- F01C1/12—Rotary-piston machines or engines of intermeshing engagement type, i.e. with engagement of co- operating members similar to that of toothed gearing of other than internal-axis type
- F01C1/123—Rotary-piston machines or engines of intermeshing engagement type, i.e. with engagement of co- operating members similar to that of toothed gearing of other than internal-axis type with tooth-like elements, extending generally radially from the rotor body cooperating with recesses in the other rotor, e.g. one tooth
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F01—MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
- F01K—STEAM ENGINE PLANTS; STEAM ACCUMULATORS; ENGINE PLANTS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; ENGINES USING SPECIAL WORKING FLUIDS OR CYCLES
- F01K3/00—Plants characterised by the use of steam or heat accumulators, or intermediate steam heaters, therein
- F01K3/18—Plants characterised by the use of steam or heat accumulators, or intermediate steam heaters, therein having heaters
- F01K3/185—Plants characterised by the use of steam or heat accumulators, or intermediate steam heaters, therein having heaters using waste heat from outside the plant
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03G—SPRING, WEIGHT, INERTIA OR LIKE MOTORS; MECHANICAL-POWER PRODUCING DEVICES OR MECHANISMS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR OR USING ENERGY SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03G6/00—Devices for producing mechanical power from solar energy
- F03G6/06—Devices for producing mechanical power from solar energy with solar energy concentrating means
- F03G6/065—Devices for producing mechanical power from solar energy with solar energy concentrating means having a Rankine cycle
- F03G6/067—Binary cycle plants where the fluid from the solar collector heats the working fluid via a heat exchanger
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F05—INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
- F05C—INDEXING SCHEME RELATING TO MATERIALS, MATERIAL PROPERTIES OR MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS FOR MACHINES, ENGINES OR PUMPS OTHER THAN NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES
- F05C2253/00—Other material characteristics; Treatment of material
- F05C2253/20—Resin
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02B—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO BUILDINGS, e.g. HOUSING, HOUSE APPLIANCES OR RELATED END-USER APPLICATIONS
- Y02B10/00—Integration of renewable energy sources in buildings
- Y02B10/20—Solar thermal
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02E—REDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
- Y02E10/00—Energy generation through renewable energy sources
- Y02E10/40—Solar thermal energy, e.g. solar towers
- Y02E10/46—Conversion of thermal power into mechanical power, e.g. Rankine, Stirling or solar thermal engines
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02E—REDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
- Y02E20/00—Combustion technologies with mitigation potential
- Y02E20/14—Combined heat and power generation [CHP]
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02T—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
- Y02T10/00—Road transport of goods or passengers
- Y02T10/60—Other road transportation technologies with climate change mitigation effect
- Y02T10/7072—Electromobility specific charging systems or methods for batteries, ultracapacitors, supercapacitors or double-layer capacitors
Definitions
- the present invention relates generally to the generation of electricity and more particularly to: (a) solar generation of electricity in combination with Rankine cycle generation of electricity; and (b) use of a Rankine cycle mechanism to generate electricity or do other work.
- flat panel solar converters be used to convert direct sunlight into thermal or electrical energy.
- Pedestal supported flat panels using direct sunlight to generate electricity were part of the Solar One project.
- Tiltable elongated concave reflector assemblies have been utilized, such as the one at Barstow, Calif., owned by FPL Energy SEGS VIII and IX.
- the prior art has failed to maximize production of electricity from a solar generator by not using effluent coolant (by which the temperature of the solar generator is controlled) as a secondary source for producing additional electricity. Also, the prior art fails to meaningfully identify a commercial way by which a heated coolant, having only a moderately elevated temperature, can be used to cost effectively produce electricity or do other work.
- the Rankine cycle principle has been applied to convert thermal energy into mechanical energy into electricity only in very expensive complex plants comprising steam driven turbines typically operating within a temperature range of 850° F. to 1100° F., under high pressure.
- Fossil fuels are used to drive boilers which produce the high temperature, high pressure steam.
- Fossil fuel conversion efficiencies of these types of installations may be as high as approximately thirty seven percent (37%).
- the present invention overcomes or substantially alleviates long term problems of the prior art by which solar energy is cost effectively converted to electrical energy and thermal energy and the thermal energy is thereafter converted to electrical energy as well.
- the present invention also provides for conversion of low temperature thermal energy, wherever obtained, to electrical energy using a novel Rankine cycle mechanism to drive an electrical generator in a cost effective way.
- the Rankine cycle mechanism can do other work as well.
- the present invention provides reliable, cost effective ways for conversion of solar energy and thermal energy to electricity, where the size of the system can be correlated to the desired capacity.
- Another paramount object of the present invention is to provide reliable, cost effective systems and methods for conversion of solar energy to electricity and thermal energy and to thereafter use the thermal energy to create additional electricity or do other work, where the size of any such system can be correlated to a desired capacity.
- Still another important object is to provide systems and methods for the conversion of low temperature thermal energy, wherever obtained, to electrical energy or do other wok using a novel Rankine cycle mechanism by which a generator is driven or another work performing mechanism is driven, in a cost effective way.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic of a solar-to-electrical and thermal energy conversion system within the scope of the present invention, where the thermal energy is converted to electricity or used to do other work;
- FIG. 2 is a schematic of a thermal-to-electrical energy conversion system within the scope of the present invention
- FIG. 3 is a perspective of a Rankine cycle mechanism, in its assembled condition, viewed from the mechanical output side, with the exterior housing removed, constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention
- FIG. 4 is a perspective of the Rankine cycle mechanism of FIG. 3, in its assembled condition, viewed from the side opposite to FIG. 3;
- FIG. 5 is an exploded perspective of the Rankine cycle mechanism of FIG. 3 for clarity of illustration.
- FIG. 6 is a perspective of the Rankine cycle mechanism of FIG. 3 with the near side plate removed, for clarity of illustration.
- the present invention is specifically related to solar generation of electricity in combination with secondary generation of electricity, or the doing of other work, using heated coolant from the solar generator in conjunction with a Rankine cycle mechanism and also to Rankine cycle production of work and/or generation of electricity using a fluid having a moderately elevated temperature.
- the present invention utilizes, in some forms, the free and limitless energy of the sun to produce electricity and thermal energy.
- the scale of commercial installations of the present invention can be tailored to the need, ranging from small stand alone systems for residential and small business use to intermediate sized plants for plant or factory use to massive assemblies design to supplement the supply of electricity or to mitigate against if not eliminate an electrical energy crisis, such as the recent one in California.
- the present invention is economical to install and maintain, is reliable and not maintenance-intensive, is efficient and cost effective to operate and does not pollute the environment.
- the sun is not a consumable resource.
- This invention is capable of making significantly more energy per square foot than conventional solar collectors.
- Prior art flat plate collectors are incapable of co-generating the large amounts of thermal energy that the present concentrating photovoltaic generating systems make, which thermal energy, in accordance with the present invention can be converted to electrical energy as well.
- Decentralized sunlight-derived electrical power can free users from the effects of peak-hour brown-outs, and from the possibility of total black-outs caused by operator error, system breakdowns or planned terrorist's actions of groups hostile to utilities or countries.
- the present invention is not space-intensive.
- the present invention in some forms, can be mounted on an existing rooftop so that it essentially takes up no additional space at all.
- Ground-mounted systems on a pad or superimposed above a parking lot are also options as well. Column mounting is a further option.
- Various embodiments of the present invention may be used in conjunction with residences, office buildings, manufacturing facilities, apartment buildings, schools, hospitals, remote communications, telemetry facilities, offshore platforms, water pumping stations, desalination systems, disinfection systems, wilderness camping, headquarters installations, remote medical facilities, refrigeration systems, farms and dairies, remote villages, weather stations, and air conditioning systems, to name a few.
- the present invention is also useful in: (a) providing cathodic protection against galvanite corrosion, (b) storage of electrical energy in batteries, in some circumstances and (c) generation and sale of electricity to utility companies.
- the sun is an energy source that, unlike fossil fuels, is free each day to whatever generation site is selected. It does not need to be mined, transported, refined, burned or purchased. So the costs for all these steps to produce energy are eliminated. Gone, too, are all forms of pollution. There are no particulates or gases vented into the atmosphere. Nor is there a need for millions of gallons of cooling water. (The small amount of liquid coolant used to cool the solar cells actually becomes a second form by which electrical power may be co-generated.
- the liquid coolant is recirculated and reused to conserve the coolant
- the liquid coolant is recirculated and reused to conserve the coolant
- solar energy there are no wastes of any kind to be removed or buried in mines or dumped at sea, so there are few, if any, health risks to our generation or future generations.
- Various embodiments of the invention are modular, allowing any installation to be large, medium or small so as to meet the exact needs of the installation for electrical energy.
- the electricity produced by solar cells of a solar electrical generator is direct current (DC), which, when appropriate, may be transformed into alternating current (AC) using an inverter or DC-to-AC converter.
- DC direct current
- AC alternating current
- the electricity produced from thermal energy using a Rankine cycle mechanism according to the present invention may be DC, AC or three phase AC, depending on the type of generator selected for use with the Rankine cycle mechanism.
- the prior art has failed to maximize production of electricity from a liquid cooled solar generator in that the coolant has not been used to co-produce additional electricity, or as a source by which other types of work can be done.
- the prior art fails to meaningfully identify a commercial way by which a heated liquid having only a moderately elevated temperature can be used to cost effectively produce electricity or do other work.
- the present invention overcomes or substantially alleviates the long term problems of the prior art which failed to use solar energy to cost effectively convert the same to electrical energy and thermal energy as well, and failed to use the thermal energy to co-generate electricity.
- the present invention provides for conversion of low temperature thermal energy, however obtained, to electrical energy using a novel Rankine cycle mechanism to drive an electrical generator in a cost effective way.
- the mechanical energy of the Rankine cycle mechanism can do other work as well.
- the present invention provides reliable, cost effective ways for conversion of solar energy and/or thermal energy into electricity, where the size of the system can be cost effectively correlated to the desired capacity.
- the Rankine cycle aspects of the present invention employ a coolant comprising a low temperature heated liquid.
- the Rankine cycle mechanism drives a generator to produce electricity of the type desired.
- the low temperature heated liquid may be passed along a closed loop through a heat exchanger where heat is transferred from the liquid to a gas which, in turn, is displaced along another closed loop through the Rankine cycle mechanism.
- the heated liquid will have a temperature below its vapor point, e.g. the temperature of the liquid, when the liquid is water, will be 210° F. or less.
- the gas may be within the range of 50° F.-80° F., typically.
- Generation of electricity in accordance with the present invention allows for delivery of the energy at desired points in time, for example, when conventional sources of energy are inadequate, such as during peak load periods of time, or during blackouts or in settings where access to conventional electricity is either difficult or impossible.
- the heated liquid can be stored in one or more insulated containers or tanks and used later at selected times to produce electricity using the Rankine cycle aspects of the present invention.
- the Rankine cycle mechanism in a presently preferred form, comprises a twin rotor, positive displacement device operated by displacement of low temperature fluid heated by liquid coolant used to cool the solar cells of a solar generator.
- Other sources of heated liquid having a temperature below the vapor point may be used to drive the Rankine cycle mechanism.
- the heated liquid when comprising a coolant used with a solar generator, is recirculated between the solar generator and heat exchanger.
- the gas passed through the same heat exchanger, is recirculated not only through the Rankine cycle mechanism but through a cooling tower or condenser as well before being returned to the coolant-gas heat exchanger, which causes the gas to expand and, therefore, aids in the gas being displaced through the Rankine cycle mechanism.
- both the coolant and the gas are contained within their respective closed loops, with the system being predicated upon low temperature, low pressure, pollution free operational characteristics. The overall efficiency of this system is projected to be over forty two percent (42%).
- the present invention concerns itself with using solar energy to co-generate both primary and secondary electricity through conversion, at a solar electric generator, of solar energy to electrical energy and deriving further electricity by using the thermal energy, of a coolant used to control the temperature of the solar electrical generator, to drive a Rankine cycle generating system.
- the coolant at moderately elevated temperatures, can drive another mechanism which does other work.
- the coolant liquid will have a temperature below its vapor point and gas, heated by the coolant in a heat exchanger, will have a low temperature which may be within the range of 50° F.-80° F.
- the Rankine cycle system comprises a Rankine cycle mechanism comprised of shaft-mounted lobes, turned oppositely by successively applying the force of the heated gas to first one lobe and then to the other.
- the shafts upon which the lobes are respectively mounted are preferably interconnected by toothed wheels or gears so that rotation of one shaft mechanically causes an opposite rotation of the other shaft at the same speed and vice versa.
- the lobes are constructed so that there is no “blow-by” effect.
- Shaft rotation mechanical energy
- is used to do work including but not limited to the rotation of a commercially-available electric generator.
- the gas is cooled in a cooling tower or the like, to which the liquid coolant is not directed.
- the electricity produced from commercial solar generators is DC, requiring use of a DC-to-AC converter to obtain AC electricity.
- the electricity derived from rotation of the Rankine cycle mechanism can be tailored as desired and may be used to produce any type electricity desired. The nature of the electricity produced as a result of rotation of the Rankine cycle mechanism will be determined by the nature of the generator selected for use.
- a second heat exchanger (the cooling tower) comprises part of one of the disclosed system through which the gas is continuously displaced.
- the gas is also displaced through a first heat exchanger where heat from the liquid coolant, passed continuously but separately passed through the first heat exchanger is transferred to the gas.
- Displacement of the gas through its loop is by pump driven circulation, or by temperature differential or both. Circulation of the liquid coolant is by pump.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a solar electric generator 12 , through which liquid coolant is circulated to cool solar cells.
- the liquid coolant is illustrated as flowing within a closed loop comprising an influent tube 14 , a path through the generator 12 where heat created in a solar-to-electric process is transferred to the coolant, through an effluent tube 16 , and thence a pump 18 , a heat exchanger influent tube 20 , and the interior of an insulated storage tank/expansion heat exchanger 22 , in separation from the fluid in the form of gas circulated through coils 24 also disposed within the interior of the tank/heat exchanger 22 .
- the liquid in heat exchanger 22 may be contained in a coil juxtaposed the gas coil 24 .
- the liquid coolant may be water having an elevated temperature below boiling.
- Output from a fuel cell may comprise the liquid introduced at tube 40 .
- the size of the tank/heat exchanger 22 may be a variable, ranging from extremely large to relatively small, depending upon design criteria.
- the closed loop in which the liquid coolant is circulated accommodates, if desired, continuous circulation of coolant during the periods when the solar electric generator 12 is exposed to sunlight.
- the heated liquid coolant at the interior 26 of the tank/heat exchanger 22 can remain static, without circulation with the pump 18 off, as the expandable gas is displaced through the coils 24 , in a manner and for purposes yet to be more fully described.
- Heated liquid can also be stored in insulated tanks other than or in addition to tank 22 for Rankine cycle generation of electricity during darkness or cloudy days. In this way, storage of generated electricity in batteries can be eliminated or minimized.
- any liquid cooled solar electric generator may comprise generator 12
- the solar generators disclosed in the above-mentioned copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/867,196 may be utilized.
- the photovoltaic solar cells of these solar generators produce electricity, in a manner well understood, which is output from generator 12 along electric cable 28 .
- This electricity is DC and can be used as such to drive DC devices, if desired.
- the DC electricity in line 28 may be converted at DC-to-AC converter 30 and transmitted thereafter as AC along cable 32 to either a utility interconnect 34 and thence along cable 36 to a utility grid or used on site, as depicted at 38 in FIGS. 1 and 2.
- the heat transfer coils 24 through which the expandable gas mentioned above passes is part of a closed loop comprising seriatim, in the direction of flow beginning with the coil 24 , a gas discharge tube 40 , a Rankine cycle mechanism 42 , a tube 44 , through which gas discharge from the Rankine cycle mechanism 42 is displaced and from which the gas is introduced into a cooling coil 46 disposed in the interior 47 of a conventional cooling tower (heat exchanger) 48 .
- Effluent gas from the cooling tower 48 is displaced along tube 50 , through pump 52 , if used, and once more introduced into the heating coil 24 through tube 54 .
- the output from the Rankine cycle mechanism 42 is used to drive a commercially available generator 56 .
- electricity derived from the generator 56 may be used in any suitable way, such as but not limited to site use, at 38 or sold to a utility company and communicated through the utility interconnect 34 to a utility grid system along cable 36 .
- FIG. 2 illustrates a second system, generally designated 60 , in accordance with principles of the present invention.
- a number of the components of the system 60 are identical to components of system 10 , which are described above. Therefore, no further description of these components is needed at this juncture. Accordingly, only the differences found in FIG. 2, when compared with FIG. 1, will be explained.
- heated liquid having a temperature below the vapor temperature thereof, is introduced along tube 20 ′ into the interior 26 of the tank/heat exchanger 22 .
- the source of the heated liquid delivered through tube 20 ′ can be any source such as geothermal water, discharged from any type of temperature lowering system, etc.
- the heated influent liquid can be passed through tank/heat exchanger 22 once or several times as deemed appropriate by those skilled in the art.
- the heated liquid delivered through influent tube 20 ′ may also be stored, as explained above in tank/heat exchanger 22 .
- the liquid with the interior 26 of tank/heat exchanger 22 when discharged, is discharged through effluent tube 14 ′.
- the quantity of heated liquid being processed or stored may be enlarged by using one or more insulated storage tanks 62 , the contents of which is returned to the interior 26 of the tank/heat exchanger upon demand, using pump 64 .
- heated liquid contained within the interior 26 of tank/heat exchanger 22 transfers heat to the previously mentioned gas passing through coils 24 .
- Displacement of the heated gas drives the Rankine cycle mechanism 42 , as explained above, such that electricity can be obtained when the Rankine cycle mechanism 42 turns generator 56 , which electricity can be communicated through cable 57 for on-site or nearby use or through cable 59 to utility interconnect 34 .
- the Rankine cycle mechanism 42 illustrated in FIG. 2 may be used to turn another device by which other work is done, as depicted at site 66 .
- FIGS. 3 through 6 illustrate one appropriate form of the Rankine cycle mechanism 42 , fashioned in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- the mechanism 42 provides the advantage of portability. While the capacity and size of the mechanism 42 may vary, RPM within the range of 200-5000 producing 5 horsepower can be produced.
- FIGS. 3 through 6 depict the illustrated Rankine cycle mechanism 42 , with exterior side housings removed.
- the side housings are essentially opposite clamshells with aperture peripheral flanges, which, when assembled, prevent entry of debris and protect against injury.
- the side housings are respectively secured at the respective apertured flanges by screws which threadedly pass through the apertures of the flanges and aligned sequential threaded apertures 70 in the other components of the mechanism.
- the Rankine cycle mechanism shown in FIGS. 3 through 6 comprises three successive contiguous plates 72 , 74 and 76 .
- Plates 72 , 74 and 76 are relatively thin and planar, sized to create a close tolerance fit between the central plate 74 and the two exterior side plates 72 and 76 to thereby prevent fluid leakage at interfaces 78 and 80 .
- plates 72 and 76 have interior and exterior smooth flat interior and exterior surfaces and are preferably formed of a suitable metal, which is not subject to corrosion and does not significantly expand due to the elevated temperature of the fluid passing through the mechanism 42 via influent tube 40 and effluent tube 42 .
- a pressure at influent tube 40 of 15 psi under some circumstances may be suitable.
- Suitable metals for fabrication of plates 72 and 76 comprise aluminum, steel, and brass.
- One or both plates 72 and 76 may, in the alternative, be formed of a suitable dimensionally stable rigid synthetic resinous material, such as ABS or polytetrafluoroethylene, or composite materials may be used.
- layer 74 While other materials could be used to form layer 74 , presently a wear resistant, dimensionally stable rigid and durable synthetic resinous material such as ABS, or polytetrafluoroethylene is preferred. Composite materials may also be used to form layer 74 .
- Layer 74 unlike layers 72 and 76 , is peripheral only, comprising a central, figure 8-shaped hollow interior 84 , accommodating receipt and the close tolerance rotation of two adjacent, interfunctional lobes 86 and 88 , as explained later in greater detail. See FIGS. 5 and 6.
- Lobes 86 and 88 may be formed of rigid dimensionally stable synthetic resinous material, metal or composites.
- the central layer 74 also comprises an interior influent discharge port 120 , in open fluid communication with influent tube 40 by which the fluid in tube 40 is introduced successively into four lobe cavities, as explained herein in greater detail.
- the central layer 74 also comprises an effluent port 122 in open communication with discharge tube 42 , for the purpose explained above.
- the male projections of the two lobes 86 and 88 comprise surfaces 110 and cavities 112 , defined by surfaces 114 and 116 .
- the lobes 86 and 88 are sized so that at times during opposite rotation, the projections each comprising surfaces 110 turn into and through the female cavities 112 . See FIG. 6.
- the oppositely rotating, intermeshing lobes 86 and 88 are non-rotatably connected, respectively, to the two parallel shafts 43 , in any conventional way, such as by use of a press-fit race 89 , or a key/keyway or set screw interconnection.
- the illustrated race 89 projects beyond the associated lobe 86 or 88 .
- the shafts are rotatably journaled in apertures 94 of the outside plates 72 and 76 , respectively, using bushings 90 and 92 , one at each end of each shaft fitted for rotation into apertures 94 (FIG. 5) in each of the two side plates 72 and 76 .
- the bushings 90 and 92 are slotted at 95 so that the radially size can be adjusted, by loosening or tightening an associated set screw 91 which threadedly crosses the slot to thereby size the bushing for close tolerance rotation in the apertures 94 while being non-rotatably connected to the associated shaft 43 .
- the two shafts 43 respectively, terminate at their proximal ends a very short distance outside the plate 72 . These proximal shaft ends are concealed by a pair of caps 96 (FIG. 4) screw fastened at 98 to the plate 72 .
- Caps 96 may be formed any suitable material, such as acceptable synthetic resinous material.
- each shaft 43 projects well beyond the exterior surface of plate 76 , as best shown in FIG. 3.
- the distal ends of the shafts are output shafts, the rotation or torque of which is converted to mechanical energy from which desired work is obtained, such as the generation of electricity.
- a pair of interconnected toothed wheels or gears 100 are non-rotatably connected, respectively, to the two shafts 43 using any suitable technology.
- Set screws in threaded apertures 101 are illustrated in FIG. 3 as being used. Accordingly, when the lobes oppositely rotate, the two shafts 43 oppositely rotate and the two gears, interconnected at site 102 , also oppositely rotate and at the same speed.
- the positive displacement, driving force of the influent fluid entering at port 40 drives one of the lobes at a first point in time, with the other lobe following by reason of the gear interconnection at site 102 . Thereafter, the influent fluid drives the second lobe, with the first lobe becoming a follower, again by reason of the interconnection of gear teeth 104 at site 102 .
- the lobes 86 and 88 are identical in the embodiment illustrated and described. Three hundred sixty degree (360°) rotation of each lobe will entail two driver intervals for each lobe and two idler or follower intervals for each lobe.
- each lobe comprises opposite maximum diameter male radial wall surfaces or edges 110 , which rotate in close tolerance relationship with the FIG. 8 shaped surface 84 of the central peripheral layer 74 , as best shown in FIG. 6. Because of the close tolerance relationship between surfaces 110 and surface 84 , there is no material “blow-by” loss of pressure or fluid flow during rotation.
- each lobe 86 and 88 comprise opposed kidney-shaped slots or grooves 112 .
- Slots 112 comprise a central reduced diameter radial surface 114 and forward and rear rounded surfaces 116 each of which merges with the associated outer radial surface 110 and the associated surface 114 .
- the driving force of the influent fluid entering at influent tube 40 and interior port 120 is predominantly applied to the leading surface 116 within one groove 112 of the lobe 86 or 88 being driven by the fluid pressure at that point in time.
- the trailing surface 116 of the one groove 112 will cause discontinuance of influent fluid pressure against the associated leading surface 116 of the same kidney-shaped groove 112 , once the trailing surface 116 passes the interior discharge port 120 and temporarily closes that groove 112 to fluid access from port 120 .
- the leading surface 116 of one of the grooves 112 of the other lobe will be placed in communication with the influent fluid under pressure entering the Rankine cycle mechanism at interior port 120 , so that the second lobe becomes the driver and the first lobe becomes the follower, as explained above.
- This alternation in driven lobe/follower lobe sequence occurs twice per lobe for each 360° rotation of the two lobes 86 and 88 .
- Spent driving fluid is discharged through interior port 122 and out through effluent tube 44 . See FIG. 6.
- the fluid used to drive the lobes 86 and 88 may be of any suitable composition.
- a plurality of mechanisms 42 can be used in series, in parallel or both. Gas, including steam, is preferred, but under certain circumstance liquid may be used.
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Abstract
Systems or combinations and methodology for converting solar energy to electrical energy and thermal energy and for converting the resultant thermal energy to electrical energy are disclosed. Systems and methodology for conversion of low temperature thermal energy, wherever obtained, to electrical energy using a Rankine cycle mechanism to drive an electrical generator or do other work in a cost effective way are also disclosed.
Description
- This application is related to copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/867,196, filed May 29, 2001 and entitled C
ONVERSION OF SOLAR ENERGY, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. - The present invention relates generally to the generation of electricity and more particularly to: (a) solar generation of electricity in combination with Rankine cycle generation of electricity; and (b) use of a Rankine cycle mechanism to generate electricity or do other work.
- Solar energy is freely and daily available. It is a clean, non-polluting source of energy. Providing a reliable, long term, cost effective, efficient way of using sunlight to obtain electrical and thermal power has long been an unsolved problem, until the present invention.
- It has been proposed that flat panel solar converters be used to convert direct sunlight into thermal or electrical energy.
- Pedestal supported flat panels using direct sunlight to generate electricity were part of the Solar One project.
- A circular, but concave reflector mounted on a single column or pedestal has been proposed. This approach was used on the Soleras water desalination project in Saudi Arabia and on the Solar Two project in Dagget, Calif.
- Fixed position concave reflectors placed in an array and positioned in side by side rows on an incline have ben proposed. See U.S. Pat. No. 4,202,322. Such an installation was made at the Federal Correctional Institution at Phoenix, Ariz.
- Tiltable elongated concave reflector assemblies have been utilized, such as the one at Barstow, Calif., owned by FPL Energy SEGS VIII and IX.
- Solar Systems comprising bidirectionally controlled Fresnel lens and solar cell assemblies, utilizing direct sunlight, have been proposed. See, U.S. Pat. No. 4,649,899, for example. Also see, U.S. Pat. No. 4,245,153. Optical detectors for dual axis tracking of the sun are known.
- The above-identified proposals and installations have failed to provide reliable, low cost, efficient, variable capacity systems by which solar energy is converted to electrical energy. A long felt need has existed for solar energy conversion plants which are reliable, efficient, cost effective and size variable to meet both low and high capacity demands for thermal and electrical energy.
- Further, the prior art has failed to maximize production of electricity from a solar generator by not using effluent coolant (by which the temperature of the solar generator is controlled) as a secondary source for producing additional electricity. Also, the prior art fails to meaningfully identify a commercial way by which a heated coolant, having only a moderately elevated temperature, can be used to cost effectively produce electricity or do other work.
- Heretofore, the Rankine cycle principle has been applied to convert thermal energy into mechanical energy into electricity only in very expensive complex plants comprising steam driven turbines typically operating within a temperature range of 850° F. to 1100° F., under high pressure. Fossil fuels are used to drive boilers which produce the high temperature, high pressure steam. Fossil fuel conversion efficiencies of these types of installations may be as high as approximately thirty seven percent (37%).
- In brief summary, the present invention overcomes or substantially alleviates long term problems of the prior art by which solar energy is cost effectively converted to electrical energy and thermal energy and the thermal energy is thereafter converted to electrical energy as well. The present invention also provides for conversion of low temperature thermal energy, wherever obtained, to electrical energy using a novel Rankine cycle mechanism to drive an electrical generator in a cost effective way. The Rankine cycle mechanism can do other work as well. The present invention provides reliable, cost effective ways for conversion of solar energy and thermal energy to electricity, where the size of the system can be correlated to the desired capacity.
- With the foregoing in mind, it is a primary object of the present invention to overcome or substantially alleviate long term problems of the prior art by which solar energy is converted to thermal energy and electrical energy and the thermal energy is thereafter converted to electrical energy.
- Another paramount object of the present invention is to provide reliable, cost effective systems and methods for conversion of solar energy to electricity and thermal energy and to thereafter use the thermal energy to create additional electricity or do other work, where the size of any such system can be correlated to a desired capacity.
- Still another important object is to provide systems and methods for the conversion of low temperature thermal energy, wherever obtained, to electrical energy or do other wok using a novel Rankine cycle mechanism by which a generator is driven or another work performing mechanism is driven, in a cost effective way.
- It is a further valuable object to provide a novel energy transforming Rankine cycle mechanism and related methodology.
- These and other objects and features of the present invention will be apparent from the detailed description taken with reference to accompanying drawings.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic of a solar-to-electrical and thermal energy conversion system within the scope of the present invention, where the thermal energy is converted to electricity or used to do other work;
- FIG. 2 is a schematic of a thermal-to-electrical energy conversion system within the scope of the present invention;
- FIG. 3 is a perspective of a Rankine cycle mechanism, in its assembled condition, viewed from the mechanical output side, with the exterior housing removed, constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention;
- FIG. 4 is a perspective of the Rankine cycle mechanism of FIG. 3, in its assembled condition, viewed from the side opposite to FIG. 3;
- FIG. 5 is an exploded perspective of the Rankine cycle mechanism of FIG. 3 for clarity of illustration; and
- FIG. 6 is a perspective of the Rankine cycle mechanism of FIG. 3 with the near side plate removed, for clarity of illustration.
- The present invention is specifically related to solar generation of electricity in combination with secondary generation of electricity, or the doing of other work, using heated coolant from the solar generator in conjunction with a Rankine cycle mechanism and also to Rankine cycle production of work and/or generation of electricity using a fluid having a moderately elevated temperature.
- The present invention utilizes, in some forms, the free and limitless energy of the sun to produce electricity and thermal energy. The scale of commercial installations of the present invention can be tailored to the need, ranging from small stand alone systems for residential and small business use to intermediate sized plants for plant or factory use to massive assemblies design to supplement the supply of electricity or to mitigate against if not eliminate an electrical energy crisis, such as the recent one in California. The present invention is economical to install and maintain, is reliable and not maintenance-intensive, is efficient and cost effective to operate and does not pollute the environment. The sun is not a consumable resource.
- Using the present invention, businesses, industrial plants, retail and office buildings, homes, farms and villages can produce some, if not all, of their own electrical power, and avoid one of the largest if not the largest uncontrollable cost of doing business today—the ever-escalating price of purchased electrical power generated from fossil and nuclear fuels.
- This invention is capable of making significantly more energy per square foot than conventional solar collectors. Prior art flat plate collectors are incapable of co-generating the large amounts of thermal energy that the present concentrating photovoltaic generating systems make, which thermal energy, in accordance with the present invention can be converted to electrical energy as well.
- Until now, remote installations have been faced with a difficult choice, i.e. pay the prohibitive costs of bringing in utility power, or depend on costly, noisy, and hard to maintain pollution-creating diesel, gas or propane driven electrical generators. The present invention is a better choice, which can be scaled or sized to independently produce as much electrical energy as needed on site, such as the energy needed to power a home or business, pump water, irrigate land and run remote communication installations.
- Unlike centralized forms of power generation, de-centralized use of on-site solar obtained electrical power needs no far-flung distribution network of gigantic towers and high voltage lines. Instead it utilizes a universally available asset—sunshine.
- Decentralized sunlight-derived electrical power can free users from the effects of peak-hour brown-outs, and from the possibility of total black-outs caused by operator error, system breakdowns or planned terrorist's actions of groups hostile to utilities or nations.
- The cost of the generating equipment itself used in the production of power for a building can be amortized over the life of the building, as part of debt financing (mortgage). Amazing as it may seem, one of the largest and most uncontrollable costs a building owner faces is the ever-escalating cost of electrical power. Using the present invention, one actually has the ability to eliminate most of the cost of purchased electrical power now and for years to come.
- When land and water were plentiful and labor was cheap, little was known about the delicate balance existing between the environment and the extraction, burning, and wasting of non-renewable fuels. Now it is all too apparent that our supply of fossil fuels is limited—and that these sources are causing damage to our atmosphere, water supplies, and food chain—damage that is or may soon become irreversible. The costs, too, for fossil fuels continue upward as the more accessible fuel deposits are consumed, and as the costs for machinery, labor, and transportation continue to rise around the world.
- Ironically, the best answer to the world's need for energy has always been the sun. The sun can satisfy a significant percentage of our energy requirements while helping us to become independent of the negative aspects inherent in conventional electrical power generation. Switching to solar-derived electrical power will reduce the pollution produced by coal, oil and nuclear fuels. It will also slow the use of coal and oil and allow us to conserve these resources for more later and perhaps valuable uses. Harnessing the sun will also reduce, or eliminate, the need for nuclear power and mitigate its many risks and problems.
- Even though the sun is just beginning to contribute to satisfying the world's energy demands on a large scale, direct sunlight has been powering satellites and spacecraft since 1958. In the 1970's the first terrestrially-directed sunlight photovoltaic devices supplied power to locations too remote to have ties to utility lines. Then, as the solar industry developed more efficient silicon cells and generators, larger grid-connected direct sunlight installations became practical.
- The present invention is not space-intensive. The present invention, in some forms, can be mounted on an existing rooftop so that it essentially takes up no additional space at all. Ground-mounted systems on a pad or superimposed above a parking lot are also options as well. Column mounting is a further option.
- Various embodiments of the present invention may be used in conjunction with residences, office buildings, manufacturing facilities, apartment buildings, schools, hospitals, remote communications, telemetry facilities, offshore platforms, water pumping stations, desalination systems, disinfection systems, wilderness camping, headquarters installations, remote medical facilities, refrigeration systems, farms and dairies, remote villages, weather stations, and air conditioning systems, to name a few.
- The present invention is also useful in: (a) providing cathodic protection against galvanite corrosion, (b) storage of electrical energy in batteries, in some circumstances and (c) generation and sale of electricity to utility companies.
- The sun is an energy source that, unlike fossil fuels, is free each day to whatever generation site is selected. It does not need to be mined, transported, refined, burned or purchased. So the costs for all these steps to produce energy are eliminated. Gone, too, are all forms of pollution. There are no particulates or gases vented into the atmosphere. Nor is there a need for millions of gallons of cooling water. (The small amount of liquid coolant used to cool the solar cells actually becomes a second form by which electrical power may be co-generated. In other words, production of thermal energy carried away by the coolant may be used to create additional electrical power.) Preferably, the liquid coolant is recirculated and reused to conserve the coolant There is no discharge of massive amounts of hot water into coastal waters to elevate the normal temperature and alter and perhaps destroy the habitats and food chains of coastal marine life. With solar energy, there are no wastes of any kind to be removed or buried in mines or dumped at sea, so there are few, if any, health risks to our generation or future generations.
- Various embodiments of the invention are modular, allowing any installation to be large, medium or small so as to meet the exact needs of the installation for electrical energy. The electricity produced by solar cells of a solar electrical generator is direct current (DC), which, when appropriate, may be transformed into alternating current (AC) using an inverter or DC-to-AC converter. The electricity produced from thermal energy using a Rankine cycle mechanism according to the present invention may be DC, AC or three phase AC, depending on the type of generator selected for use with the Rankine cycle mechanism.
- The prior art has failed to maximize production of electricity from a liquid cooled solar generator in that the coolant has not been used to co-produce additional electricity, or as a source by which other types of work can be done. The prior art fails to meaningfully identify a commercial way by which a heated liquid having only a moderately elevated temperature can be used to cost effectively produce electricity or do other work.
- Previously, the Rankine cycle principle has been limited to conversion of thermal energy into mechanical energy, and thence into electrical energy, only in expensive, complex plants comprising steam driven turbines typically operated within the range of 850° F. to 1100° F., under high pressure. Fossil fuels often drive boilers which produce the high temperature, high pressure steam. Fossil fuel conversion efficiencies of these types of installations can be as high as approximately thirty seven percent (37%).
- The present invention overcomes or substantially alleviates the long term problems of the prior art which failed to use solar energy to cost effectively convert the same to electrical energy and thermal energy as well, and failed to use the thermal energy to co-generate electricity. The present invention provides for conversion of low temperature thermal energy, however obtained, to electrical energy using a novel Rankine cycle mechanism to drive an electrical generator in a cost effective way. The mechanical energy of the Rankine cycle mechanism can do other work as well. The present invention provides reliable, cost effective ways for conversion of solar energy and/or thermal energy into electricity, where the size of the system can be cost effectively correlated to the desired capacity. The Rankine cycle aspects of the present invention employ a coolant comprising a low temperature heated liquid. The Rankine cycle mechanism drives a generator to produce electricity of the type desired. The low temperature heated liquid may be passed along a closed loop through a heat exchanger where heat is transferred from the liquid to a gas which, in turn, is displaced along another closed loop through the Rankine cycle mechanism. The heated liquid will have a temperature below its vapor point, e.g. the temperature of the liquid, when the liquid is water, will be 210° F. or less. The gas may be within the range of 50° F.-80° F., typically.
- When the Rankine cycle aspects of the present invention are used in conjunction with a solar generator, there is an estimated thirty percent increase in the overall amount of electricity generated.
- Generation of electricity in accordance with the present invention, allows for delivery of the energy at desired points in time, for example, when conventional sources of energy are inadequate, such as during peak load periods of time, or during blackouts or in settings where access to conventional electricity is either difficult or impossible.
- The heated liquid can be stored in one or more insulated containers or tanks and used later at selected times to produce electricity using the Rankine cycle aspects of the present invention.
- The Rankine cycle mechanism, in a presently preferred form, comprises a twin rotor, positive displacement device operated by displacement of low temperature fluid heated by liquid coolant used to cool the solar cells of a solar generator. Other sources of heated liquid having a temperature below the vapor point may be used to drive the Rankine cycle mechanism. Preferably, the heated liquid, when comprising a coolant used with a solar generator, is recirculated between the solar generator and heat exchanger. Preferably, the gas, passed through the same heat exchanger, is recirculated not only through the Rankine cycle mechanism but through a cooling tower or condenser as well before being returned to the coolant-gas heat exchanger, which causes the gas to expand and, therefore, aids in the gas being displaced through the Rankine cycle mechanism. Thus, both the coolant and the gas are contained within their respective closed loops, with the system being predicated upon low temperature, low pressure, pollution free operational characteristics. The overall efficiency of this system is projected to be over forty two percent (42%).
- Thus, the present invention concerns itself with using solar energy to co-generate both primary and secondary electricity through conversion, at a solar electric generator, of solar energy to electrical energy and deriving further electricity by using the thermal energy, of a coolant used to control the temperature of the solar electrical generator, to drive a Rankine cycle generating system. In lieu of the secondary electricity, the coolant, at moderately elevated temperatures, can drive another mechanism which does other work. The coolant liquid will have a temperature below its vapor point and gas, heated by the coolant in a heat exchanger, will have a low temperature which may be within the range of 50° F.-80° F.
- The Rankine cycle system comprises a Rankine cycle mechanism comprised of shaft-mounted lobes, turned oppositely by successively applying the force of the heated gas to first one lobe and then to the other. The shafts upon which the lobes are respectively mounted are preferably interconnected by toothed wheels or gears so that rotation of one shaft mechanically causes an opposite rotation of the other shaft at the same speed and vice versa. The lobes are constructed so that there is no “blow-by” effect. Shaft rotation (mechanical energy) is used to do work, including but not limited to the rotation of a commercially-available electric generator.
- After the heated gas has been used to drive the Rankine cycle mechanism, in the presently preferred embodiment, the gas is cooled in a cooling tower or the like, to which the liquid coolant is not directed.
- The continuous flow of the coolant and the gas takes place in a closed system comprised respectively of a closed liquid flow loop and a closed gas flow loop. Thus, nothing is emitted to the environment or atmosphere which could potentially be harmful.
- The electricity produced from commercial solar generators is DC, requiring use of a DC-to-AC converter to obtain AC electricity. The electricity derived from rotation of the Rankine cycle mechanism can be tailored as desired and may be used to produce any type electricity desired. The nature of the electricity produced as a result of rotation of the Rankine cycle mechanism will be determined by the nature of the generator selected for use.
- A second heat exchanger (the cooling tower) comprises part of one of the disclosed system through which the gas is continuously displaced. The gas is also displaced through a first heat exchanger where heat from the liquid coolant, passed continuously but separately passed through the first heat exchanger is transferred to the gas. Displacement of the gas through its loop is by pump driven circulation, or by temperature differential or both. Circulation of the liquid coolant is by pump.
- Specific reference is now made to the Figures wherein like numerals are used to indicate like parts throughout. Specifically, illustrated in diagrammatic or schematic form in FIG. 1 is one of several novel systems, generally designated10, which also implements unique methodology. More specifically, FIG. 1 illustrates a solar
electric generator 12, through which liquid coolant is circulated to cool solar cells. The liquid coolant is illustrated as flowing within a closed loop comprising aninfluent tube 14, a path through thegenerator 12 where heat created in a solar-to-electric process is transferred to the coolant, through aneffluent tube 16, and thence apump 18, a heat exchangerinfluent tube 20, and the interior of an insulated storage tank/expansion heat exchanger 22, in separation from the fluid in the form of gas circulated throughcoils 24 also disposed within the interior of the tank/heat exchanger 22. If desired the liquid inheat exchanger 22 may be contained in a coil juxtaposed thegas coil 24. The liquid coolant may be water having an elevated temperature below boiling. Output from a fuel cell may comprise the liquid introduced attube 40. - The size of the tank/
heat exchanger 22 may be a variable, ranging from extremely large to relatively small, depending upon design criteria. The smaller the tank/heat exchanger, the lower its storage capacity for the liquid coolant, the temperature of which is below the vapor point. The larger the tank the greater the storage capacity. The closed loop in which the liquid coolant is circulated accommodates, if desired, continuous circulation of coolant during the periods when the solarelectric generator 12 is exposed to sunlight. During darkness or heavy overcast, the heated liquid coolant at the interior 26 of the tank/heat exchanger 22 can remain static, without circulation with thepump 18 off, as the expandable gas is displaced through thecoils 24, in a manner and for purposes yet to be more fully described. The flow of the coolant and the gas is laminar, not turbulent. Heated liquid can also be stored in insulated tanks other than or in addition totank 22 for Rankine cycle generation of electricity during darkness or cloudy days. In this way, storage of generated electricity in batteries can be eliminated or minimized. - While any liquid cooled solar electric generator may comprise
generator 12, the solar generators disclosed in the above-mentioned copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/867,196 may be utilized. The photovoltaic solar cells of these solar generators produce electricity, in a manner well understood, which is output fromgenerator 12 alongelectric cable 28. This electricity is DC and can be used as such to drive DC devices, if desired. However, if AC electricity is desired, the DC electricity inline 28 may be converted at DC-to-AC converter 30 and transmitted thereafter as AC alongcable 32 to either autility interconnect 34 and thence alongcable 36 to a utility grid or used on site, as depicted at 38 in FIGS. 1 and 2. - The heat transfer coils24 through which the expandable gas mentioned above passes is part of a closed loop comprising seriatim, in the direction of flow beginning with the
coil 24, agas discharge tube 40, aRankine cycle mechanism 42, atube 44, through which gas discharge from theRankine cycle mechanism 42 is displaced and from which the gas is introduced into a coolingcoil 46 disposed in theinterior 47 of a conventional cooling tower (heat exchanger) 48. Effluent gas from thecooling tower 48 is displaced alongtube 50, throughpump 52, if used, and once more introduced into theheating coil 24 throughtube 54. - The output from the
Rankine cycle mechanism 42 is used to drive a commerciallyavailable generator 56. As stated above, electricity derived from thegenerator 56 may be used in any suitable way, such as but not limited to site use, at 38 or sold to a utility company and communicated through theutility interconnect 34 to a utility grid system alongcable 36. - Reference is now made to FIG. 2, which illustrates a second system, generally designated60, in accordance with principles of the present invention. A number of the components of the
system 60 are identical to components ofsystem 10, which are described above. Therefore, no further description of these components is needed at this juncture. Accordingly, only the differences found in FIG. 2, when compared with FIG. 1, will be explained. Independent of source, heated liquid having a temperature below the vapor temperature thereof, is introduced alongtube 20′ into the interior 26 of the tank/heat exchanger 22. The source of the heated liquid delivered throughtube 20′ can be any source such as geothermal water, discharged from any type of temperature lowering system, etc. The heated influent liquid can be passed through tank/heat exchanger 22 once or several times as deemed appropriate by those skilled in the art. The heated liquid delivered throughinfluent tube 20′ may also be stored, as explained above in tank/heat exchanger 22. The liquid with the interior 26 of tank/heat exchanger 22, when discharged, is discharged througheffluent tube 14′. In situations where tank/heat exchanger 22 has inadequate heated liquid storage capacity, the quantity of heated liquid being processed or stored may be enlarged by using one or moreinsulated storage tanks 62, the contents of which is returned to the interior 26 of the tank/heat exchanger upon demand, usingpump 64. In any event, heated liquid contained within theinterior 26 of tank/heat exchanger 22, either in static position or being circulated therethrough, transfers heat to the previously mentioned gas passing throughcoils 24. Displacement of the heated gas drives theRankine cycle mechanism 42, as explained above, such that electricity can be obtained when theRankine cycle mechanism 42 turnsgenerator 56, which electricity can be communicated throughcable 57 for on-site or nearby use or throughcable 59 toutility interconnect 34. In addition or in concert with drivinggenerator 56, theRankine cycle mechanism 42 illustrated in FIG. 2 may be used to turn another device by which other work is done, as depicted atsite 66. - Reference is now made to FIGS. 3 through 6, which illustrate one appropriate form of the
Rankine cycle mechanism 42, fashioned in accordance with the principles of the present invention. In some embodiments, themechanism 42 provides the advantage of portability. While the capacity and size of themechanism 42 may vary, RPM within the range of 200-5000 producing 5 horsepower can be produced. FIGS. 3 through 6 depict the illustratedRankine cycle mechanism 42, with exterior side housings removed. The side housings are essentially opposite clamshells with aperture peripheral flanges, which, when assembled, prevent entry of debris and protect against injury. The side housings are respectively secured at the respective apertured flanges by screws which threadedly pass through the apertures of the flanges and aligned sequential threadedapertures 70 in the other components of the mechanism. - Exclusive of the housing, the Rankine cycle mechanism shown in FIGS. 3 through 6 comprises three successive
contiguous plates Plates central plate 74 and the twoexterior side plates interfaces plates mechanism 42 viainfluent tube 40 andeffluent tube 42. A pressure atinfluent tube 40 of 15 psi under some circumstances may be suitable. Suitable metals for fabrication ofplates plates - While other materials could be used to form
layer 74, presently a wear resistant, dimensionally stable rigid and durable synthetic resinous material such as ABS, or polytetrafluoroethylene is preferred. Composite materials may also be used to formlayer 74.Layer 74, unlikelayers hollow interior 84, accommodating receipt and the close tolerance rotation of two adjacent,interfunctional lobes Lobes central layer 74 also comprises an interiorinfluent discharge port 120, in open fluid communication withinfluent tube 40 by which the fluid intube 40 is introduced successively into four lobe cavities, as explained herein in greater detail. Thecentral layer 74 also comprises aneffluent port 122 in open communication withdischarge tube 42, for the purpose explained above. The male projections of the twolobes surfaces 110 andcavities 112, defined bysurfaces lobes female cavities 112. See FIG. 6. - The oppositely rotating, intermeshing
lobes parallel shafts 43, in any conventional way, such as by use of a press-fit race 89, or a key/keyway or set screw interconnection. The illustratedrace 89 projects beyond the associatedlobe apertures 94 of theoutside plates bushings side plates bushings set screw 91 which threadedly crosses the slot to thereby size the bushing for close tolerance rotation in theapertures 94 while being non-rotatably connected to the associatedshaft 43. The twoshafts 43, respectively, terminate at their proximal ends a very short distance outside theplate 72. These proximal shaft ends are concealed by a pair of caps 96 (FIG. 4) screw fastened at 98 to theplate 72.Caps 96 may be formed any suitable material, such as acceptable synthetic resinous material. - To the contrary, the distal ends of each
shaft 43 projects well beyond the exterior surface ofplate 76, as best shown in FIG. 3. Thus, the distal ends of the shafts are output shafts, the rotation or torque of which is converted to mechanical energy from which desired work is obtained, such as the generation of electricity. - A pair of interconnected toothed wheels or gears100 are non-rotatably connected, respectively, to the two
shafts 43 using any suitable technology. Set screws in threadedapertures 101 are illustrated in FIG. 3 as being used. Accordingly, when the lobes oppositely rotate, the twoshafts 43 oppositely rotate and the two gears, interconnected atsite 102, also oppositely rotate and at the same speed. As explained hereinafter in greater detail, the positive displacement, driving force of the influent fluid entering atport 40 drives one of the lobes at a first point in time, with the other lobe following by reason of the gear interconnection atsite 102. Thereafter, the influent fluid drives the second lobe, with the first lobe becoming a follower, again by reason of the interconnection ofgear teeth 104 atsite 102. - The mechanical energy or torque, which occurs when
shafts 43 rotate, is converted to electrical energy at generator 56 (FIGS. 1 and 2) or used to do other work at 66 (FIG. 2). - As can best be seen in FIG. 6, the
lobes - To prevent blow-by, each lobe comprises opposite maximum diameter male radial wall surfaces or
edges 110, which rotate in close tolerance relationship with the FIG. 8 shapedsurface 84 of the centralperipheral layer 74, as best shown in FIG. 6. Because of the close tolerance relationship betweensurfaces 110 andsurface 84, there is no material “blow-by” loss of pressure or fluid flow during rotation. - Further, each
lobe grooves 112.Slots 112 comprise a central reduced diameterradial surface 114 and forward and rearrounded surfaces 116 each of which merges with the associated outerradial surface 110 and the associatedsurface 114. The driving force of the influent fluid entering atinfluent tube 40 andinterior port 120 is predominantly applied to the leadingsurface 116 within onegroove 112 of thelobe surface 116 of the onegroove 112 will cause discontinuance of influent fluid pressure against the associated leadingsurface 116 of the same kidney-shapedgroove 112, once the trailingsurface 116 passes theinterior discharge port 120 and temporarily closes thatgroove 112 to fluid access fromport 120. At this point in time, the leadingsurface 116 of one of thegrooves 112 of the other lobe will be placed in communication with the influent fluid under pressure entering the Rankine cycle mechanism atinterior port 120, so that the second lobe becomes the driver and the first lobe becomes the follower, as explained above. This alternation in driven lobe/follower lobe sequence occurs twice per lobe for each 360° rotation of the twolobes interior port 122 and out througheffluent tube 44. See FIG. 6. - The fluid used to drive the
lobes mechanisms 42 can be used in series, in parallel or both. Gas, including steam, is preferred, but under certain circumstance liquid may be used. - The invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The present embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced therein.
Claims (44)
1. A method of using solar energy to generate primary and secondary electricity comprising the acts of:
directly converting solar energy to electricity at a solar electric generator;
cooling the solar electric generator with a coolant;
utilizing heat carried away from the electric generator by the coolant to drive a Rankine cycle generating system to also produce electricity.
2. A method according to claim 1 wherein the coolant is a liquid and wherein the utilizing act comprises passing the heated coolant as a liquid through a heat exchanger to elevate the temperature of gas being passed through the heat exchanger which drives a Rankine cycle mechanism to produce torque which in turn drives an electricity producing-generator.
3. A method according to claim 2 wherein the gas comprises steam.
4. A method according to claim 1 wherein the electricity produced by the directly converting act is direct current electricity.
5. A method according to claim 4 further comprising the act of converting the direct current electricity to alternating current electricity.
6. A method according to claim 2 wherein the liquid coolant is recirculated through the solar electric generator and the heat exchanger.
7. A method according to claim 2 wherein the gas is cooled and thereafter recirculated through the heat exchanger.
8. A method according to claim 2 wherein the gas is displaced through a cooling device after passing through the Rankine cycle mechanism and before being returned to the heat exchanger.
9. A method according to claim 2 wherein the liquid coolant discharged from the solar generator has a relative low temperature range below the vapor point and the gas is within a temperature range of 80° F. or less.
10. A method according to claim 2 wherein the gas is displaced into the Rankine cycle mechanism at a pressure on the order of 15 psi.
11. A method of using liquid at a moderately elevated temperature to do work comprising the acts of:
displacing liquid at an elevated temperature, below its vapor temperature through a liquid-gas heat exchanger;
displacing a gas through the liquid-gas heat exchange to transfer heat from the liquid to the gas;
displacing the gas to rotate a Rankine cycle lobe-displacement mechanism to create rotation of at least one output shaft;
converting the output shaft rotation to work.
12. A method according to claim 11 further comprising the act of recirculating the gas through the heat exchanger and the Rankine cycle mechanism.
13. A method according to claim 11 wherein the third displacing act comprises rotating two output shafts and the converting act comprises work derived from the rotation of two shafts.
14. A method according to claim 13 wherein the two output shafts are geared together for common though opposite rotation.
15. A method according to claim 12 further comprising the act of cooling the gas after it leaves the Rankine cycle mechanism and before it returns to the heat exchanger.
16. A method according to claim 11 wherein the converting act comprises driving an electric generator via shaft rotation to obtain electricity.
17. A method of generating electricity by displacing a fluid at a moderately elevated temperature comprising the acts of:
introducing the fluid at a temperature within a range of up to 100° F. and at an influent pressure within a range on the order of 15 psi into a space between oppositely rotatable lobes respectively mounted on interconnected shafts within a Rankine cycle mechanism;
applying the pressure of the fluid: (a) first predominantly against one lobe to forcibly rotate that lobe in a first direction causing the other lobe, through the interconnected shafts, to oppositely rotate in a second direction and (b) second predominantly against the other lobe to forcibly rotate the other lobe in the second direction causing the one lobe, through the interconnected shafts, to rotate in the first direction;
driving an electric generator with one or both shafts to create electricity.
18. A method according to claim 17 wherein the fluid is a gas.
19. A method according to claim 18 wherein the gas comprises steam.
20. A method of generating electricity comprising the acts of:
impinging influent fluid under low pressure and at a moderately elevated temperature on a continuous flow basis against a first shaft-mounted lobe of a Rankine cycle mechanism to forcibly rotate the first lobe and the shaft upon which the first lobe is mounted in a first direction, a second shaft-mounted lobe being caused to oppositely rotate in a second direction as a follower;
thereafter impinging the continuous flow influent fluid against the second lobe to forcibly rotate the second lobe and the shaft upon which the second lobe is mounted, the first lobe and the shaft upon which the first lobe is mounted to rotate in the first direction as a follower;
generating electricity via shaft rotation derived from the Rankine cycle mechanism.
21. A method according to claim 20 further comprising the act of elevating the temperature of the fluid in a heat exchanger using a liquid at a temperature below its boiling point.
22. A method of generating electricity using a Rankine cycle mechanism comprising the acts of:
impinging influent fluid having an elevated temperature first against one lobe and then another lobe to rotate the lobes in opposite directions and to turn at least one output shaft;
using the rotation of the at least one output shaft to drive a generator by which electricity is produced.
23. A system for using solar energy to co-generate primary and secondary electricity comprising the acts of:
a solar generator which directly converts solar energy to electricity;
a cooling unit for cooling the solar electric generator with a coolant;
a Rankine cycle mechanism which utilizes heat derived from the coolant to drive a generator to also produce electricity.
24. A system according to claim 23 wherein the coolant comprises a liquid, the cooling unit comprises a heat exchanger by which the elevated temperature of the liquid coolant increases the temperature of a gas being passed through the heat exchanger, and the Rankine cycle mechanism comprises at least one output shaft the rotation of which drives the generator.
25. A system according to claim 24 wherein the gas comprises steam.
26. A system according to claim 23 wherein the electricity produced by the solar generator is direct current electricity.
27. A method according to claim 26 further comprising a direct current-to-alternating current converter by which the direct current electricity is transformed to alternating current electricity.
28. A method according to claim 24 wherein the cooling unit comprises a recirculator by which liquid coolant is continuously recirculated through the solar electric generator and the heat exchanger.
29. A system according to claim 24 wherein the cooling unit comprises a recirculator by which the gas is continuously recirculated through the heat exchanger and the Rankine cycle mechanism.
30. A system according to claim 29 wherein the cooling unit further comprises a second heat exchanger whereby the gas is continuously displaced through the second heat exchanger after passing through the Rankine cycle mechanism and before being returned to the first heat exchanger.
31. A system according to claim 24 wherein the liquid coolant discharged from the solar generator has a relative low temperature range below its vapor temperature and the gas is within the temperature range below the temperature of the liquid coolant.
32. A system according to claim 24 wherein the gas is displaced into the Rankine cycle mechanism at a pressure of on the order of 15 psi.
33. A system for using liquid at a moderately elevated temperature to do work comprising:
liquid-gas heat exchange through which a liquid at an elevated temperature below its vapor point is displaced and through which a gas is displaced to transfer heat from the liquid to the gas;
a Rankine cycle lobe-displacement mechanism using the gas passed therethrough, after discharge from the heat exchanger, to rotate at least one output shaft;
a device driven by the shaft rotation to do work.
34. A system according to claim 33 further comprising a pump by which wherein the gas is recirculated through the Rankine cycle mechanism and the heat exchanger.
35. A system according to claim 34 further comprising a gas cooler for cooling the gas after it leaves the Rankine cycle mechanism and before it returns to the heat exchanger.
36. A system according to claim 33 wherein the Rankine cycle mechanism comprises two oppositely rotated output shafts both of which drive the work device.
37. A system according to claim 36 wherein the Rankine cycle mechanism comprises two interconnected shaft-mounted, oppositely rotating gears non-rotatably respectively connected to two output shafts for common though opposite rotation.
38. A system according to claim 33 wherein the work device comprises an electric generator turned by rotation of the at least one shaft to obtain electricity.
39. A system for generating electricity by displacing a fluid at a moderately elevated temperature comprising the acts of:
a Rankine cycle mechanism into which the fluid is introduced at a temperature within a range on the order of 100° F. or less and at a pressure within a range of on the order of 15 psi into a space between oppositely rotatable lobes respectively mounted on interconnected shafts of the Rankine cycle mechanism;
such that the pressure of the fluid is: (a) first applied against one lobe to forcibly rotate that lobe in a first direction causing the other lobe, through the interconnected shafts, to oppositely rotate in a second direction and (b) then is applied against the other lobe to forcibly rotate the other lobe in the second direction causing the one lobe, through the interconnected shafts, to rotate in the first direction;
an electric generator connected to one or both shafts to create electricity.
40. A system according to claim 39 wherein the fluid is a gas.
41. A system according to claim 40 wherein the gas comprises steam.
42. A system for generating electricity comprising:
a Rankine cycle mechanism which receives influent fluid under low pressure and a moderately elevated temperature on a continuous flow basis such that the fluid: (a) first against a first shaft-mounted lobe of the Rankine cycle mechanism to forcibly rotate the first lobe and the shaft upon which the first lobe is mounted in a first direction, a second lobe shaft-mounted being caused by said rotation of the first lobe to oppositely rotate in a second direction as a follower and (b) thereafter against the second lobe to forcibly rotate the second lobe and the shaft upon which the second lobe is mounted, the first lobe and the shaft upon which the first lobe is mounted being caused by said rotation of the second lobe to rotate in the first direction as a follower;
an electric generator connected to one or both shafts to generate electricity due to shaft rotation.
43. A system according to claim 42 further comprising a heat exchanger by which the temperature of the fluid is elevated using a liquid at a temperature below its boiling point before introduction into the Rankine cycle mechanism.
44. A system for generating electricity comprising a Rankine cycle mechanism comprising interconnected oppositely rotating shaft mounted lobes such that influent fluid having an elevated temperature is impinged first against one lobe and then the other lobe to concurrently rotate the lobes in opposite directions to turn the shafts and a generator rotated by one or both output shafts to drive the generator to create electricity.
Priority Applications (1)
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US10/667,099 US20040055300A1 (en) | 2002-03-14 | 2003-09-19 | Rankine cycle generation of electricity |
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US10/099,069 US6672064B2 (en) | 2002-03-14 | 2002-03-14 | Rankine cycle generation of electricity |
US10/667,099 US20040055300A1 (en) | 2002-03-14 | 2003-09-19 | Rankine cycle generation of electricity |
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US10/099,069 Continuation US6672064B2 (en) | 2002-03-14 | 2002-03-14 | Rankine cycle generation of electricity |
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US10/099,069 Expired - Lifetime US6672064B2 (en) | 2002-03-14 | 2002-03-14 | Rankine cycle generation of electricity |
US10/667,099 Abandoned US20040055300A1 (en) | 2002-03-14 | 2003-09-19 | Rankine cycle generation of electricity |
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