Dictionary Definition
ejector
Noun
1 a person who ousts or supplants someone else
[syn: ouster]
2 a mechanism in a firearm that ejects the empty
shell case after firing [syn: cartridge
ejector]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- IPA: /iː'ʤɛktɚ/
Noun
- One who, or that which, ejects or dispossesses.
- (Mech.) A jet jump for lifting water or withdrawing air from a space. It´s user to suck vapors or air. (Steam Engine), a condenser in which the vacuum is maintained by a jet pump.
- ejector seat: a pilot's seat in an airplane that can be forcibly ejected in the case of an emergency; then the pilot descends by parachute.
- That part of the mechanism of a breech-loading firearm which ejects the empty shell.
- A lever for removing circuit boards from an electronic chassis.
Translations
- Spanish: eyector
External links
Extensive Definition
An injector, ejector, steam ejector or steam
injector is a pump-like
device that uses the Venturi
effect of a converging-diverging
nozzle to convert the pressure energy of a motive
fluid to velocity
energy which creates a low pressure zone that draws in and entrains
a suction fluid and then recompresses the mixed fluids by
converting velocity energy back into pressure energy. The motive
fluid may be a liquid, steam or any other gas. The entrained
suction fluid may be a gas, a liquid, a slurry, or a dust-laden gas
stream.
The adjacent diagram depicts a typical modern
ejector or injector. It consists of a motive fluid inlet nozzle and
a converging-diverging outlet nozzle. Water, air, steam, or any other fluid at high
pressure provides the motive force at the inlet.
The Venturi effect, a particular case of Bernoulli's
principle, applies to the operation of this device. Fluid under
high pressure is converted into a high-velocity jet at the throat
of the convergent-divergent nozzle which creates a low pressure at
that point. The low pressure draws the suction fluid into the
convergent-divergent nozzle where it mixes with the motive
fluid.
In essence, the pressure energy of the inlet
motive fluid is converted to kinetic
energy in the form of velocity head at the throat of the
convergent-divergent nozzle. As the mixed fluid then expands in the
divergent diffuser, the kinetic energy is converted back to
pressure energy at the diffuser outlet in accordance with
Bernoulli's principle.
Depending on the specific application, an
injector is commonly also called an Eductor-jet
pump, a water
eductor, a vacuum ejector, a steam-jet ejector, or an aspirator.
Key design parameters
The compression ratio of the injector, P_2/P_1,
is defined as ratio of the injectors's outlet pressure P_2 to the
inlet pressure of the suction fluid P_1.
The entrainment ratio of the injector, W_s/W_v,
is defined as the amount of motive fluid W_s (in kg/hr) required to
entrain and compress a given amount W_v (in kg/hr) of suction
fluid..
The compression ratio and the entrainment ratio
are key parameters in designing an injector or ejector.
History
The injector was invented by a Frenchman,
Henri
Giffard in 1858 and patented in the United
Kingdom by Messrs Sharp Stewart & Co. of Glasgow. Motive
force was provided at the
inlet by a suitable high-pressure fluid.
The injector was originally used in the boilers
of steam-driven
railroad locomotives for injecting or pumping the boiler
feedwater to and from the boiler. The injector consisted of a body
containing a series of three or more nozzles, "cones" or "tubes".
The motive steam passed through a nozzle that reduced its pressure
below atmospheric and increased the steam velocity. Fresh water was
entrained by the steam jet, and both steam and water entered a
convergent "combining cone" which mixed them thoroughly so that the
water condensed the steam. The condensate mixture then entered a
divergent "delivery cone" which slowed down the jet, and thus built
up the pressure to above that of the boiler. An overflow was
required for excess steam or water to discharge, especially during
starting. There was at least one check valve
between the exit of the injector and the boiler to prevent back
flow, and usually a valve to prevent air being sucked in at the
overflow.
After some initial skepticism resulting from the
unfamiliar and superficially paradoxical mode of operation, the
injector was widely adopted as an alternative to mechanical pumps
in steam-driven locomotives. The injectors were simple and
reliable, and they were thermally efficient.
Steam locomotives dominated rail transport from
the mid 19th century
until the mid 20th
century, after which they were superseded by diesel
and electric
locomotives.
Uses
The use of injectors (or ejectors) in various
industrial applications has become quite common due to their
relative simplicity and adaptability. For example:
- To inject chemicals into the boiler drums of small, stationary, low pressure boilers. In large, high-pressure modern boilers, usage of injectors for chemical dosing is not possible due to their limited outlet pressures.
- In thermal power stations, they are used for the removal of the boiler bottom ash, the removal of fly ash from the hoppers of the electrostatic precipitators used to remove that ash from the boiler flue gas, and for creating a vacuum pressure in steam turbine exhaust condensers.
- For use in producing a vacuum pressure in steam jet cooling systems.
- For the bulk handling of grains or other granular or powdered materials.
Similar devices called aspirators based on the same
operating principle are used in laboratories to create a
partial vacuum and for medical use in suction of mucus or bodily
fluids.
Multi-stage steam ejectors
In practice, for suction pressure below 100
mbar absolute, more than
one ejector will be used, usually with condensors between the
ejector stages. Condensing of motive steam greatly improves ejector
set efficiency. Both barometric and shell-and-tube
surface
condensers are used for this purpose.
Construction materials
Injectors or ejectors are fabricated in carbon
steel, Stainless
steel, titanium, PTFE, carbon and other
materials.
See also
References
Additional reading
- Mechanical Engineering: Railways
- Locomotive Management
External links
ejector in Czech: Injektor
ejector in German: Dampfstrahlspeisepumpe
ejector in Estonian: Injektor
ejector in Spanish: Inyector
ejector in Galician: Inxector
ejector in Dutch: Injector
ejector in Polish: Strumienica
ejector in Russian: Паровой инжектор
ejector in Turkish: Ejektörlü pompa
ejector in Ukrainian: Інжектор