Abstract:
A method of transferring and recovering energy comprises placing in different reactors two or more different solid adsorbents having a gaseous reactant adsorbed thereon and each having a different gaseous reactant vapor pressure, in a first reaction cycle, pressurizing a first portion of the reactors at a first pressure to desorb the gaseous reactant in an endothermic reaction, and pressurizing a second portion of the reactors at a second pressure to adsorb the gaseous reactant in an exothermic reaction, and in a second reaction cycle, pressurizing the first portion of the reactors at the second pressure to adsorb the gaseous reactant in an exothermic reaction, and pressurizing the second portion of the reactors at the first pressure to desorb the gaseous reactant in an endothermic reaction, and directing at least a portion of the heat released during the exothermic reactions or at least a portion of heat adsorbed during the endothermic reactions to heat exchange means for energy recovery. 
     The invention includes apparatus having means for carrying out the process.

Description:
This is a continuation of application serial in 7/376,426, filed July 7, 1989, now abandoned. 
    
    
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     The use of compounds comprising solid-vapor compositions formed by adsorption of gas molecules on a solid adsorbent as heat pump working materials is known in the art. Heat pump systems using such materials have a number of advantages over other heat pumps for residential and commercial space conditioning, industrial heat pumping and refrigeration. Such advantages include higher temperature lift created by the solid-vapor media as compared to other sorption media thus eliminating the need for cooling towers or lift staging. Moreover, the apparatus used for the solid-vapor compound heat pumps require few, if any, moving parts, resulting in simple and reliable hardware. Additionally, such systems do not use the objectionable CFC&#39;s. 
     The solid-vapor compounds suitable for heat pumps include complex compounds which are materials which adsorb molecules of gas to form coordinative bonds in which the gaseous reactant coordinates via electron displacement with the solid adsorbent, commonly a solid metal inorganic salt. The adsorption/desorption process releases significant heat during adsorption and adsorbs energy during the desorption phase. Unlike most other sorption processes, the entire adsorption or desorption reactions may occur at constant temperature thus eliminating problems with hot and cold sorber ends. Useful gaseous reactants include water, ammonia, methanol, methane, ethane and the like. A number of such materials are described in co-pending applications serial Nos. 115,820, filed Nov. 2, 1987 and 262,016, filed Feb. 29, 1988. Such compounds and their uses described in the aforesaid co-pending applications are incorporated herein by reference. 
     Heat activated heat pumps consist of a heat engine subsystem which generates high pressure refrigerant vapor, essentially a thermal compressor, and a heat pump subsystem which uses high pressure refrigerant to produce cooling or heat pumping. The thermal compressor, heat pump, and their combination in a heat activated heat pump comprise useful thermodynamic systems which make advantageous use of solid-gas reactions. It is an object of the present invention to use such reactions to even greater advantage and efficiency. Moreover, thermal energy and cool storage systems may also be improved by using staging techniques of the present invention with respect to charge and discharge temperatures as well as energy density. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention comprises a system utilizing methods and apparatus designed for making highly advantageous use of solid-vapor adsorption/ desorption technology. In the reactions, solid reactants react with gaseous reactants to form compounds in which the gas is alternatively adsorbed and desorbed. In the process of the invention, a plurality or series of different compounds are selected based on the vapor pressure of the gaseous reactant. Utilizing a plurality of reactors or reaction chambers or sites in one or more reactors, each which is charged with a different solid reactant, the materials are made to adsorb or desorb gaseous reactant at a given constant pressure by adjusting the pressure below or above the equilibrium vapor pressure of the gas. By selecting the appropriate solid in the series used to charge the different reactors in the apparatus, and by selecting an appropriate pressure for desorption reactions and typically a different pressure for adsorption reactions, the system can be made to function to take full advantage of discrete, stepwise adsorption and desorption of the different compounds to achieve thermal compression, heat pumping through mechanical or thermal activation and thermal energy storage. Heat is cascaded through all stages of the heat pump, desorbing gaseous reactant vapor at each stage. The system of the invention achieves improved efficiency using relatively simple hardware. These as well as other advantages will be evident from the following detailed description. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 is a schematic illustrating and example of an apparatus used in the system of the invention; 
     FIG. 2 is a phase diagram illustrating a preferred embodiment the process of the invention carried out in the apparatus illustrated in FIG. 1; 
     FIG. 3 illustrates another apparatus embodiment for carrying out the method according to the invention; 
     FIG. 4 illustrates a mechanically activated heat pump apparatus used in the system of the invention; 
     FIG. 5 is a phase diagram illustrating a preferred embodiment of the process of the invention carried out in the apparatus illustrated in FIG. 4; and 
     FIG. 6 is a phase diagram illustrating another embodiment of the invention using constant pressure staging at different pressure and temperature levels. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     Heat Activated Heat Pump 
     As used herein, the term &#34;compound&#34; is intended to mean any reaction product formed by adsorption and desorption of a gaseous reactant on a solid reactant within the scope of the invention. In practicing the discrete staging of a constant pressure engine cycle according to the invention, a plurality of two or more different solid reactants are selected, and a different solid reactant is introduced into a different reactor or reaction site in the heat pump apparatus. The different compounds of a set, series or group of compounds used in the process are selected such that the temperature of adsorption of the low vapor pressure compound at low pressure, is higher than the desorption temperature of the next higher vapor pressure compound at high pressure. Each of the compounds of such sets or groups each also exhibit different vapor pressure curves, i.e., each has a different vapor pressure-temperature relationship, and which is independent of the concentration of the gaseous reactant. By selecting appropriate compounds and arranging them in the aforesaid sequence, the process cycle will be carried out so that the heat of adsorption is always at an adequate temperature to drive the next or subsequent desorption reaction in the cycle. Preferably the compounds of the series are selected so that none of the compounds in the same reactor have an additional coordination step at lower equilibrium temperature which may adsorb more reactant gas from the other compounds during temperature equilibrium or shut-down condition which would reduce cycle performance during intermittent operation. Moreover, masses of each compound are adjusted so that an approximately equal amount of heat is required to desorb each compound. 
     Specific reactants used to form compounds useful in the invention include metal oxides, hydrides, halides, carbonates, nitrites, nitrates, oxalates, sulfides and sulfates. Preferred metals for the inorganic salts are selected from alkali and alkaline earth metals, transition metals, aluminum, zinc, cadmium and tin. Preferred transition metals are manganese, iron, nickel, and cobalt. Hereinafter these reactants will be sometimes referred to as solids, salts or solid reactants. 
     Gaseous reactants which are adsorbed on the solids to form compounds which are especially useful in the processes of the invention are ammonia, water, methyl amine and methanol, ammonia being especially suitable because it is stable, and forms high energy complexes. However, hydrogen, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, other lower alkanols, lower alkanes, particularly methane and ethane, pyridine, alkylamines, polyamines and phosphine may also be used. These gaseous reactants may also be referred to as refrigerants herein. 
     In a specific example of a set or series of compounds, to illustrate a system according to the invention, salts MgBr 2 , MgCl 2 , SrBr 2  and SrCl 2  are used in a heat pump consisting of four separate reaction vessels or separate heat-transfer regions in one or more reactors. The compounds comprise the ammonia ligand complex compound of the aforesaid salts with the MgBr 2  and MgCl 2  salts forming complexes containing 2 to 6 NH 3 , SrBr 2  containing 2 to 8 NH 3  and SrCl 2  containing 1 to 8 NH 3 . FIG. 1 illustrates schematically an example of an apparatus embodiment for carrying out the discrete constant pressure staged heat pump. The salts are charged to reactors 12, 14, 16 and 18, respectively, in successive ascending order of the complex compound ligand vapor pressure. Thus, first reactor 12 is charged with MgBr 2 , reactor 14 with MgCl 2 , reactor 16 with SrBr 2 , and reactor 18 with SrCl 2 . The apparatus includes a burner 20, heat exchanger 22, evaporator 24 and condenser 26 together with appropriate valves and conduits for directing ammonia gas from and to the reactors and the condenser and evaporator, and valves 52, 54 and 56 for directing heat transfer fluid between the reactors as well as pumps and heat exchange conduits for pumping heat transfer fluid within the system. In the first half-cycle, reactor 12 containing the high temperature salt MgBr 2  is at high pressure corresponding to (1) in FIG. 2 and reactor 16 containing SrBr 2  is also at high pressure corresponding to (3). Reactors 14 and 18 are at low pressure, reactor 18 containing SrCl 2  and reactor 14 containing MgCl 2 , corresponding to (7) and (9), respectively. 
     During the first-half cycle, valves 52 and 56 are positioned so that pump 19 circulates heat transfer fluid through reactors 14 and 16, thereby transferring energy released during gas adsorption from reactor 14 to the solid reactant in reactor 16 to drive the desorption reaction occurring there. With the valve settings and proper positioning of valve 15, energy released during the adsorption in reactor 18 is rejected or recovered via heat exchanger 22. In this first half of the heat exchange cycle, valve 25 is also positioned for directing ammonia vapor from reactors 12 and 16 to condenser 26 and from evaporator 24 to reactors 14 and 18. Pump 17 circulates heat transfer fluid from burner 20 to reactor 12 to drive the desorption of the compound in that reactor. 
     Before start of the second half-cycle of the process, a short phase of heat recuperation and temperature shifting is required. The valve positions are charged so that reactors 12 and 14 are coupled, and reactors 16 and 18 are coupled, respectively, for heat transfer communication. Heat transfer fluid is pumped through each pair of coupled reactors to transfer heat from the hotter to the colder reactor. Thus, reactor 12 is cooled while reactor 14 is heated; reactor 16 is cooled while reactor 18 is heated. This terminates the recuperative and temperature adjustment phase in preparation for the second half-cycle. 
     In the second half-cycle burner 20 is not used. Solid reactant in reactor 14 desorbs its gaseous reactant, driven by heat from the adsorption reaction in reactor 12. The compound in reactor 18 desorbs, driven by heat released from adsorption of the compound in reactor 16. Ammonia from the desorption reactions is directed to the condenser 26, and ammonia for the adsorption reactions is obtained from evaporator 24. 
     At the conclusion of the second half-cycle, another phase of recuperation and temperature adjustment as previously described readies the system for repeating the first half-cycle. In this example, using the aforesaid adsorption and desorption pressures and temperatures, the condensation temperature in condenser 26 is 315° K and in the evaporator, 275° K. The apparatus of FIG. 1 could also be modified with reactors 12 and 16 combined and reactors 14 and 18 combined in single vessels, respectively, since both reactors in either pair are always at the same pressure. All four compounds may be located in a single reactor, with the heat pump consisting of two such reactors, each operating at alternately high and low pressure. 
     Points 1-10 on the phase diagram of FIG. 2 illustrate the discrete staging that occurs in the reactors at the various temperatures and pressures as the ammonia ligand is alternately adsorbed and desorbed on the metal salts. At (1), prime heat from a source, for example burner 20 in FIG. 1, is used to partially or fully desorb MgBr 2  6NH 3  to MgBr 2  2NH 3 . At (2), MgCl 2  6NH 3  is desorbed, at (3) SrBr 2  8NH 3  is desorbed, and at (4) SrCl 2  8NH 3  is desorbed. Gaseous reactant from the desorptions is condensed at (5) releasing heat, which may be recovered by any heat exchange means. The desorption reactions are carried out at a single pressure, 16.28 Bar. 
     The adsorption phase of the reaction is carried out at a lower pressure, 4.6 Bar with the aforesaid complexes, ammonia being directed to a lower pressure and evaporated at (6), absorbing heat. The ammonia vapor is then adsorbed into the four complex compounds at points (7), (8), (9) and (10). Heat released from the adsorption at (7) is rejected externally by heat exchanger 22 (FIG. 1), and heat from the other three adsorption reactions is used to drive the desorption reactions illustrated by the arrows between points (8) and (4), (9) and (3), and (10) and (2), respectively. 
     At the end of this portion of the cycle, the process is reversed so that, for example, complex at (1), now desorbed, is lowered in temperature and pressure to the conditions at (10) for adsorption. The complex at (10), which is now adsorbed, is increased in temperature and pressure to the conditions of (1), as are complex compounds in the other three reactors. Thus, the output from the cycle, depending on the intended application, may be used for cooling obtained from ammonia evaporation at (6), or the heat released from the process at (5) and (7) in a quasi-continuous mode. 
     Referring again to the example using four aforesaid complex compounds and points (1)-(10) in FIG. 2, the following table illustrates the different temperatures and pressures at which the complex compounds adsorb and desorb the ammonia ligand. 
     
                       TABLE I______________________________________     Desorb          Adsorb     (16.28 Bar)     (4.6 Bar)NH.sub.3    Temp. °K.______________________________________MgBr.sub.2.2/6       (1)   604         544  (10)MgCl.sub.2.2/6       (2)   495         449  (9)SrBr.sub.2.2/8       (3)   432         391  (8)SrCl.sub.2.1/8       (4)   374         342  (7)______________________________________ 
    
     From this example of a set or series of complex compounds it is shown that the temperature of adsorption of the low vapor pressure salt, at the low adsorbing pressure, is higher than the desorption temperature of the next higher vapor pressure salt. Observing FIG. 2, this critical feature will be evident from the complex compounds in the table noting the points of the cycle stages which correspond to the phase diagram numbers. 
     Referring to FIG. 3, a three reactor apparatus utilizing a system according to the invention is shown. Examples of suitable compounds for use in such an apparatus for carrying out a discrete constant pressure adsorption/desorption process is shown in Tables II and III together with the desorption and adsorption temperatures and pressures. The compounds are listed in their ascending order from the lowest to the highest ammonia vapor pressure. In the example of FIG. 3, instead of using an evaporator and condenser illustrated in FIG. 1, NaBr or BaCl 2  in reactors 55 and 57 is used to desorb and adsorb the ammonia from and to reactors 72, 74 and 76. In this example, in each of the respective reactors, a different one of the salts forming the complex compounds of Table II or III is placed in each of the reactors, so that the compound having the lowest gas vapor pressure is in first reactor 72, and compounds of successively higher gaseous reactant vapor pressures in the successive reactors 74 and 76. Again, this successive positioning of compounds based on ascending vapor pressures in corresponding successive reactors or reaction regions as illustrated in the drawing and previously described, is critical to the invention. 
     Burner 71 and heat exchanger 70 are utilized in a manner as previously described in FIG. 1 (for burner 20 and heat exchanger 22). Heat is also exchanged externally with heat transfer fluid flowing through reactors 55 and 57. These reactors alternatively provide heating and cooling. During one half-cycle, reactor 57 provides cooling while 55 is heating, and in the other half-cycle 55 is cooling and 57 is heating. The advantages of using the sodium bromide, or other solid reactant, for adsorbing/desorbing the gaseous reactant as opposed to the condenser/evaporator equipment include (1) higher energy density in the adsorption/desorption reactions as compared to evaporation and condensation of the gas, resulting in higher coefficients of performance and less system mass, and (2) the ability to reject heat at high temperature with lower system pressure than would be required using refrigerant condensation. For continuous cooling two or more subsystems can be operated in a phase shifted mode. 
     
                       TABLE II______________________________________        Desorb  Adsorb        (16.28 Bar)                (4.6 Bar)NH.sub.3       Temp. °K.______________________________________MgBr.sub.2.2/6 604       544CoCl.sub.2.2/6 495       449SrCl.sub.2.1/8 374       342______________________________________ 
    
     
                       TABLE III______________________________________        Desorb  Adsorb        (7.31 Bar)                (1.44 Bar)NH.sub.3       Temp. °K.______________________________________MgBr.sub.2.2/6 562       502CoCl.sub.2.2/6 461       416CaCl.sub.2.2/4 356       320______________________________________ 
    
     Thermal Compressor 
     The process and system of the invention may also be used as a thermal compressor, which is a subsystem of a heat activated heat pump. For example referring to FIG. 1, by removing condenser 26, evaporator 24, and valve 31, the resulting sub-system apparatus is a thermally activated compressor which receives low pressure vapor through conduit 43 and delivers high pressure vapor through conduit 45. Such a thermal compressor may be used as a less expensive alternative to an electrically driven compressor for obtaining pressurized gaseous reactants. Thus, constant pressure staging of appropriate compounds can provide efficient thermal compression of any gaseous reactant, such as water, ammonia, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, methanol and other lower alkanols, alkylamines, polyamines, and phosphine. Hydrogen can also be compressed by use of hydrides in the reactors in place of complex compounds while carbon dioxide can be used with metal oxide/metal carbonate reactants, and water can be used with metal oxide/metal hydroxide or complex compound reactants. Such thermal compression using a process of the present invention is more efficient than conventional thermal compressors because heat is cascaded through several stages and high pressure vapor is generated at each stage. 
     Heat Pumps Activated by Mechanical Work or Pressure 
     The constant pressure staging process of the invention may also be used in a heat pump which receives high pressure refrigerant vapor, discharges low pressure vapor, and produces cooling or heating. The high pressure refrigerant vapor can be provided by a mechanical compressor, thermal compressor, for example a constant pressure staged thermal compressor described above, or other source. The constant pressure staged heat pump is most advantageous when coupled with a mechanical compressor, because efficiency and reliability of mechanical compressors increase as compression ratio is decreased. Such an apparatus is illustrated in FIG. 4, and process conditions shown in FIG. 5. Compounds A, B, C and D are contained in reactors 104, 105, 106, and 107, respectively. During the first half-cycle, valve 101 is positioned such that high pressure vapor delivered through conduit 113 from compressor 100 is directed to reactors 104 and 106. Compound A in reactor 104 and complex C in reactor 106 are initially at high pressure P2 in the first half-cycle, and B and D in reactors 105 and 107 are at low pressure P1. Compound A adsorbs at high pressure point (5), releasing heat which drives desorption of compound B at low pressure point (2); compound C adsorbs at high pressure (7), releasing heat which drives desorption of compound D at low pressure (4). Vapor generated during desorption of compounds B and D is routed through valve 101 and conduit 114 to the inlet (low pressure) side of compressor 100. 
     During the second half-cycle, compounds A and C are at low pressure, and compounds B and D are at high pressure. Valve 101 is positioned to direct high pressure vapor from the compressor to compounds B and D in vessels 105 and 107, and to direct low pressure vapor from reactors 104 and 106 to the inlet side of compressor 100. During this half-cycle, compound, A desorbs at low pressure (1) producing refrigeration at temperature T1. Compound B adsorbs at high pressure (6), and heat released is used to drive the desorption of complex C at low pressure (3). Compound D desorbs at high pressure (8), delivering heat at temperature T8. Cooling at T1, heating at T8, or both, are the useful products of the heat pump operation. Continuous cooling or heating is provided by utilizing two or more banks of reactors, operating out of phase. 
     The number of compounds used can be two or greater. The lowest temperature compound (A in FIG. 5) may be replaced by evaporation and condensation of the gaseous reactant. The utility and improvement of the invention is evident from FIG. 5. Heat is lifted from temperature T1 to T8 while operating between pressures P1 and P2. Use of only compound A (or refrigerant condensation/evaporation) would only lift heat to T3 at the same pressures. A peak pressure of P3, several orders of magnitude higher than P2, would be required to obtain temperature lift to T8. 
     Compounds and operating conditions are selected such that the high pressure compounds always adsorb at sufficiently high temperature so heat released can be used to drive the next description. Specifically, referring to FIG. 5, T3 must be greater than T2, T5 greater than T4, and T7 greater than T6. Thus, in this embodiment, the successive compounds in the set or group are selected so that the higher temperature adsorbing compound, i.e., the compound that adsorbs at a higher temperature, at high pressure, has an adsorption temperature higher than the desorption temperature of the next succeeding, compound at low pressure. The compounds are located into successive reactors in this ascending adsorption temperature order. Selection of such compounds and high and low reaction pressures will be understood by those skilled in the art. Although the reactions described and shown herein will normally involve the next successive higher vapor pressure compound, in certain instances, such as heat pump operations under extreme temperature conditions, or multiple temperature level operations, it may be desirable to skip one or more compounds in any specific cycle. 
     The discrete constant pressure staging cycle process disclosed herein has a number of advantages over previously known heat pump cycles, thermal compressors, and thermal storage. As a heat activated heat pump or thermal compressor, the process of the present invention delivers high coefficient performance, and takes thermodynamic advantage of high driving temperatures, limited only by the stability of the lowest vapor pressure compounds. Multiple staging is performed within the hardware of single staged systems, and results in lower cost than is possible with other two or multi-stage cycles. Between half-cycles, the complex in each stage is heated by drawing heat from the next hotter stage, making regeneration of sensible heat efficient and simple, and improving cycle efficiency as compared to other solid-vapor heat pumps and thermal compressors. Operating as a mechanical or thermal compressor heat pump, the system of the invention makes high temperature lift and low pressure ratios possible. Although separate reactors are shown in the drawings for the different reaction sites the reactions may be carried out in reaction sites or chambers of a single reactor. Thus, as used herein, the term reactors is intended to include one or more reaction sites or chambers in a single reactor as well as multiple reactors. 
     Constant pressure staging of the invention can also be used to receive or deliver vapor at more than one pressure level. This capability allows for multiple temperature refrigeration, multiple temperature heat delivery from a heat pump, thermal storage at different temperature levels, or thermal compression simultaneously operating at more than one compression ratio. The number of different pressure ratios possible is equal to the number of stages in the cycle. FIG. 6 is a phase diagram illustrating an example of a six stage cycle for providing refrigeration at two different temperatures. Refrigeration temperatures T1 and T2 establish system pressures P1 and P2, according to the vapor pressure function of the heat pump working media, which can be a pure refrigerant undergoing phase change, or refrigerant involved in any sorption process. Heat rejection temperature T3 at pressure P3 is also on the heat pump media vapor pressure line. The cycle operates in the manner as described previously. Heat is input at a temperature T4, which is relatively high compared to T3. Energy input at state point (1) drives desorption of compound A. Adsorption at point (15) releases heat to drive desorption at point (2), and so on for compounds B-F. Heat input at point (1) is effectively cascaded through the cycle, in the state point sequence of 1-15-2-14-3-13-4-12-5-11-6-10. Heat release during adsorption at state point 10 is rejected external to the heat pump cycle. The advantage and unique feature of this cycle embodiment is that adsorptions occur at two different pressure levels. Gaseous reactant vapor generated to provide cooling at T1 is at pressure P1 and is adsorbed at state points 10, 12, and 15, while the vapor generated to provide cooling at T2 is at pressure P2 and is adsorbed at points 11, 13, and 14. The selection of pressures for the different stages is dependent on the desired or available media, i.e., solid-vapor, liquid-vapor, etc., and on the amount of cooling to be achieved at each temperature level. It is desirable to maximize the number of stages in a cycle while maintaining adequate heat transfer approach temperatures (temperature differentials) for heat exchange between stages. Moreover, more than two temperature and pressure levels may also be used. Heat may be directed between any state point (reaction chamber) and external heat exchange means in order to input or to take advantage of the multiple cooling and heating temperatures of such a system. For example, such a system may be used in cascaded refrigeration, air heating and hot water supply, as well as in applications with cogeneration systems where excess waste heat is available at multiple temperature levels. 
     A heat pump incorporating multiple heat rejection temperatures, or thermal compressor using multiple delivery pressures, operates in the same manner although some stages of sorption operate below the intermediate pressure level(s). Multiple adsorption and desorption pressures may also be used in a single system. 
     Although not intended as part of the present invention, the constant pressure staging system may be operated with bivariant media in which the adsorbent vapor pressure is also a function of the refrigerant concentration. Each individual vapor pressure line is replaced by a solution field over which the specific media operates. The resulting system is less practical for use with bivariant solid vapor media, for example zeolites or activated carbon, because solution fields, of reasonable refrigerant concentration spread in the media, are quite wide. Since no overlap of solution fields is acceptable, only a portion of the theoretical solution field and very few stages may be used. Moreover, the large thermal masses and ineffective staging results in low efficiency. Additionally, during shutdown all refrigerant will migrate to the lowest vapor pressure media, further reducing efficiency for cyclic operation. Use of liquid absorbents overcomes some of these bivariant media problems. Each stage of the constant pressure staged cycle would be a narrow concentration range of the media. Media may be pumped from stage to stage such that as it is desorbed and vapor decreased, it moves to a higher temperature stage, and as fluid absorbed refrigerant it moves to a lower temperature stage. Temperature change between stages may be accomplished recuperatively.