Title of Invention

A SUPERCONDUCTING ELECTROMAGNETIC MACHINE AND METHOD OF COOLING IT BY REVERSE FLOW VENTILATION

Abstract A superconducting electromagnetic machine (50) comprising a solid core rotor (64) having a cryogenically cooled superconducting rotor coil winding (66); a stator (52) coaxial with said rotor and having stator coils (106) magnetically coupled with said superconducting rotor coil winding, said stator coils arranged around said rotor, and said stator having cooling passages (100) extending from an outer periphery (48) of the stator to an inner periphery (56) of the stator, said inner periphery separated from the rotor by an annular air gap (88); said rotor having cooling passages for a cryogenic cooling fluid; characterized in that said superconducting electromagnetic machine (50) comprising, an annular air gap between said solid core rotor and said stator, wherein said annular gap having at least one lateral opening comprising a cooling gas passage port and said annular gap being substantially open along a length of said rotor; a stator ventilation system (82,94) providing a cooling gas to said outer periphery of the stator and said passages (100) of the stator, wherein substantially all of said cooling gas flows through said annular gap and through said cooling gas passage port, wherein said ventilation system comprises a plurality of baffle chambers adjacent said outer periphery of the stator, wherein said baffle chambers comprise a first chamber having an outer cooling gas inlet port open to a source of cooling gas and a second chamber having cooling gas inlet port open to said first chamber, and wherein said first and second chambers each have cooling gas outlets to said rotor.
Full Text BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to superconducting synchronous elecltrical machines With a
reverse flow ventilation system to cool the stator of the machine.
In the process of producing electricity, power generators create heat that must be
dissipated from the generator. Heat occurs in generators due primarily to windage
and friction, electric current flow, and time-varying magnetic fields in magnetic
structures. Frictional heating occurs as the rotor spins at high speed in the generator.
Similarly, heating also occurs as current flows through the rotor and stator coils, as
these coils rotate relative to one another in the magnetic fields of the generator.
Losses in the magnetic circuit occur as the magnetic fields change with time in
permeable materials, such as for example in the stator core and the rotor poles of a
synchronous generator. Generators are conventionally equipped with cooling systems
to transfer heat from the stator and rotor away from the generator
Gas ventilation cooling systems have been used in conventional synchronous
machines, such as generators and motors, that do not employ superconducting
materials. These gas ventilation systems tightly couple the cooling of stator and rotor.
The ventilation system cools both the rotor and stator by forcing cooling gas through
gas passages in the rotor and stator. Conventional ventilation systems have employed
forward flow and reverse flows of cooling gases through the stator and rotor.
In conventional synchronous machines, such as synchronous generators and motors,
the ventilation system of gas-cooled machines tightly couples the cooling of stator and
rotor. In the forward flow ventilation scheme (Fig. 1) the cooling gas flows through
sections of the rotor and stator in series which creates a tight coupling Between rotor
and stator cooling systems. In the reverse flow ventilation scheme (Fig. 2) the cooling
gas flows through stator and rotor in parallel, but then mixes in the machine air gap,
also leading to a coupling of the stator and rotor cooling.
Because of the coupling of the cooling of the rotor and stator, the ventilation system
must be configured to provide adequate cooling for both the stator and rotor. To
provide cooling for the rotor, some compromises may have to be made in a
conventional ventilation system with respect to cooling the stator and vice versa. It
may be difficult to optimize the cooling of either the stator or rotor with a ventilation
system that must provide cooling for both the rotor and stator. Nevertheless,
ventilation systems have conventionally provided cooling for both the stator and rotor
in large industrial and utility power generators.
In a superconducting synchronous machine the rotor field winding is operated at
cryogenic temperatures through a cryorefrigeration system that has its own self-
contained cooling circuit. A cold, cryogenic coolant is supplied to the rotor through a
transfer coupling, from where it is circulated through a cooling circuit on the rotor
where it picks up heat to be removed, and then returns to a stationary cooling system
through the transfer coupling. This cryogenic cooling system provides effective
cooling of the rotor in a superconducting machine.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The cryogenic cooling system for a superconducting rotor does not cool the stator.
The stator of such a superconducting synchronous machine requires a stator cooling
system. Contrary to conventional machines where stator and rotor cooling systems
are coupled in a single ventilation system, the cooling system of the cryogenic rotor
and the gas-cooled stator may be completely independent. Thus, a stator cooling
system is needed to cool the stator in a synchronous machine having a
superconducting rotor.
A stator ventilation system has been developed for a superconducting synchronous
machine. The stator of a superconducting synchronous machine is cooled by a
reverse ventilation system in which a cooling gas, such as air or hydrogen, is drawn
from the air gap and pumped through a diffuser, heat exchanger and through the stator
core back to the air gap. In addition, a conventional synehronous machine may. be
retrofit with a superconducting rotor and a conventional ventilation system modified
to embody the ventilation system disclosed here. An alternate stator ventilation
configuration follows the principle of forward flow, in which the air flows through the
stator in the opposite direction to the reverse flow stator cooling system.
In one embodiment, the invention is a synchronous machine comprising: a rotor
coupled to a rotor cooling system; a stator around the rotor and separated from the
rotor by an annular gap between the rotor and an inner surface of the stator, and a
stator ventilation system separate and independent of the rotor cooling system.
In another embodiment, the invention is a superconducting electromagnetic machine
comprising: a solid core rotor having a cryogenically cooled superconducting rotor
coil winding; a stator coaxial with said rotor and having stator coils magnetically
coupled with said superconducting rotor coil winding, said stator coils arranged
around said rotor, and said stator having cooling passages extending from an outer
periphery of the stator to an inner periphery of the stator, said inner periphery
separated from the rotor by an annular air gap; said rotor having cooling passages for
cryogenic cooling fluid; a stator ventilation system providing cooling gas to said outer
periphery of the stator and said passages of the stator.
In a further embodiment, the invention is a method for cooling a superconducting
electromagnetic machine having a solid core rotor including a superconducting rotor
coil winding and a stator and a stator ventilation system, said method comprising the
steps of: cryogenically cooling the rotor coil winding independently of cooling the
stator; cooling the stator with a cooling gas flowing through the stator, and drawing
the cooling gas out of the stator into an air gap between the stator and rotor core,
where the cooling gas is isolated from any rotor cooling system.
The proposed stator cooling systems are independent of the type of superconducting
rotor configurations, and can be equally applied to iron-core and air-core
superconducting rotors.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE/DRAWINGS
FIGURE 1 is a schematic cross-sectional diagram of a quarter-section of a generator
showing a conventional forward-flow cooling system;
FIGURE 2 is a schematic cross-sectional diagram of a quarter-section of a generator
showing a conventional reverse-flow cooling system; and
FIGURE 3 is a schematic diagram of a synchronous electromagnetic machine having
a superconducting rotor;
FTGURE 4 is a schematic cross-sectional diagram of a quarter section of a
superconducting generator having a solid rotor and a stator closed ventilation system
FIGURE 5 is a schematic cross-sectional diagram of quarter section of a
superconducting generator having a solid core rotor and an open stator ventilation
system.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIGURE 1 shows a conventional generator 8 having a conventional forward flow
ventilation system 10, in which cooling gas (arrows 12) flows through the rotor 14,
and/or rotor air gap 16, and then through the stator 18. The cooling gas flows through
radial gas passages 20 in the rotor and similar radial gas passages 21 in the stator in
series which creates a tight coupling between rotor and stator cooling systems.
As the cooling gas flows through the rotor, heat in the rotor is transferred to the gas as
the temperature of the gas rises towards the temperature of the rotor coils. The heated
gas exiting the rotor and the cooling gas that directly entered the air gap 16 mix and
become the cooling gases that enter the stator. The mixed cooling gases enter the
stator passages 21 at an interior stator surface that surrounds the rotor. As the gases
move through the stator, heat from the hot stator coils is transferred to the cooling
gases and removed from the stator as when the gases exit the stator.
From the outer periphery of the stator, the heated cooling gases pass through annular
ducts 22 that surround the stator and direct the hot gases to the heat exchangers. The
hot gases are cooled in heat exchangers 24, flow through recirculation ducts 26 and
are pumped back into the rotor and air gap by an appropriate radial or axial fan 28.
The cooling gases are also driven through the rotor and into the gap 16 by centrifugal
forces in the rotor. In addition, some of the cooling gases exiting the fan 28 are
directed to cool the end turns 30 of the stator coil windings.
FIGURE 2 illustrates a conventional reverse flow ventilation system 32 in which
cooling gas flows through stator 18 and rotor 14 in parallel. The heated cooling gas
exits both the rotor and stator into the air gap 16. The mixing in the air gap of the
cooling gases from the stator and rotor results in a coupling of the cooling systems for
the rotor and stator.
Reverse flow cooling in a conventional electrical machine 8 delivers cold gas (arrows
12) simultaneously to both the stator 18 and the rotor 14 by providing parallel inlet
paths to the stator core and the rotor entrance. Cold gas flows from a cooler, e.g., heat
exchanger, into the outer periphery of the stator core, which may contain baffles to
control the airflow through the stator core, and into the air gap. Cold gas also flows
from the cooler into the ends of the rotor, and, generally through cooling gas sub-slots
20 and radially outwardly through gas flow passages in the rotor slots 20, to the
generator air gap 16. A fan 28 attached to the rotor circulates the exhaust gas from
the air gap back to the cooler
In particular, FIGURE 2 shows a cross section of a generator 8 having a conventional
reverse flow ventilated cooling system 32. U.S. Patent No. 5,633,543 shows an
exemplary reverse flow ventilation system. A portion of the flow of cooling gases
(arrow 12) is drawn into the rotor by centrifugal forces acting on the gases passing
through the rotor passages 20. The cooling gases may be air, hydrogen or some other
cooling gas. The heated rotor gases exit the ducts at the surface of the rotor into the
air gap 16 between the rotor and stator. A spinning fan 28 mounted at the end(s) of
the rotor draws the heated gas from the gap 16 between the stator and rotor, and into
an external duct diffuser 34 that directs the gases to a heat exchanger 36 that cools the
gas.
In a reverse flow system, the stator 18 is cooled by ventilation flow paths that are
separate from the flow paths in the rotor. Gases cooled by the heat exchanger 36
enters a plenum chamber 38 surrounding the stator. A portion (arrow 39) of the
cooled gas from the heat exchanger is directed towards the rotor. A portion (arrows
41) of the cooling gas is directed to cool the stator end turns.
In the stator plenum chamber 38, the cooling gas passes through baffles 40 in the
chamber (or directly to the stator near the center of the stator) and into cooling gas
passages 21 that are open at the outer circumferential surface of the stator. As the gas
flows radially inward through the stator, heat from the stator coils is transferred to the
gas. The hot gas flows from the stator into the air gap. The rotor fans 28 draw the
warmed gas from the air gap 16 and out to the external duct 34 to the heat exchanger
36. The cooled gas from the heat exchanger is exhausted from exhaust ports to the
plenum chamber 38 around the stator.
FIGURE 3 shows an exemplary synchronous generator machine 50 having a stator 52
and a rotor 54. While the machine 50 is shown as a generator, it may also be
configured as an electric motor. In the generator, the rotor includes field winding coil
66 that fit inside the cylindrical rotor cavity 56 of the stator. An annular gap 57 is
formed between the outside periphery of the rotor and the cylindrical surface of the
stator that defines a cylindrical cavity 56 which receives the rotor. As the rotor turns
within the stator, a magnetic field generated by the rotor and rotor coils moves/rotates
through the stator and creates an electrical current in the windings of the stator coils
60. This current is output by the generator as electrical power
The rotor 54 has a generally longitudinally-extending axis 62 and a generally solid
rotor core 64. The solid rotor core 64 has high magnetic permeability, and is usually
made of a ferromagnetic material, such as iron. In a low power density
superconducting machine, the iron core of the rotor is used to reduce the
magnetomotive force (MMF), and, thus, minimize the amount of superconducting
(SC) coil wire needed for the coil winding.
The rotor 54 supports at least one longitudinally-extending, racetrack-shaped, high-
temperature superconducting (HTS) coil winding 66. The HTS coil winding may be
alternatively a saddle-shape or have some other shape that is suitable for a particular
HTS rotor design. The HTS coil winding is cooled by cryogenic fluid supplied to the
rotor by an outside source of cooling fluid. The cooling of the rotor and its HTS coils
is independent of and isolated from cooling systems for other components of the
generator 50, such as the stator 52.
The rotor includes a collector end shaft 68 and a drive end shaft 70 that bracket the
rotor core 64, which are supported by bearings 72. The end shafts may be coupled to
external devices For example, the collector end shaft 68 has a cryogen transfer
coupling 74 to a source 75 of cryogenic cooling fluid used to cool the SC coil
windings in the rotor. An exemplary source of cryogenic cooling fluid is disclosed in
commonly-owned and co-pending U.S. Patent No._____________(now U.S. Patent
Application Serial No. 09/854,943, filed May 15, 2001, to the best of my knowledge,
the following patents associated with cooling systems were filed by CRD: 17GE-7154
- Cryogenic cooling system for rotor having a high temperature superconducting field
winding - Laskaris. 17GE-7227 - Cryogenic cooling refrigeration system and method
having open-loop short term cooling for a superconducting field winding - Wang,
Laskaris, Ackermann. 17GE-7228 - Cryogenic cooling refrigeration system for rotor
having a high temperature superconducting field winding and method - Laskaris,
Ackermann, Wang) and entitled "Cryogenic Cooling Refrigeration System For Rotor
Having A High Temperature Super-Conducting Field Winding And Method".
The cryogen transfer coupling 74 includes a stationary segment coupled to a source of
cryogen cooling fluid and a rotating segment which provides cooling fluid to the HTS
coil. The collector end shaft 68 also includes a collector 76 for electrically connecting
to the rotating SC coil winding. The drive end shaft 70 of the rotor may be driven by
a power turbine coupling 78.
FIGURE 4 shows a cross-section of one-half of a generator 50 (see rotor axial center-
line 62 and longitudinal center-line 80) having a reverse flow, ventilated stator
cooling system 82. The cooling system provides cooling gas, e.g., ambient air or
hydrogen, to the stator. The stator cooling system is independent of and isolated from
the cryogenic cooling system that provides cryogen cooling fluid to the rotor.
The stator ventilation system 82 includes a cooling gas fan 84 that is affixed to an
end(s) shaft (68 and/or 70) of the rotor. The fan 84 spins with the rotor to draw
heated cooling gas (arrows 86) from an annular air gap 88 between the rotor and
stator. The hot gas drawn from the gap is pumped by the fan, through a gas passage
89, and into an external gas duct plenum chamber/diffuser 90 that extends around
stator of the generator.
The plenum chamber duct 90 shows the high pressure/velocity gas from passage 89
and directs the warmed gas to one or more heat exchangers 92. The heat exchangers
extract heat from the gas and cools the gas so that it may be recirculated to cool the
stator. Cooled gas from the heat exchanger enters a baffle chamber 94 surrounding
the outer periphery of the stator. The baffle chamber may have an outer wall 93 that
circumferentially surrounds the stator and has openings for the heat exchangers. The
baffle chamber may include annular walls 96 attached to the stator, to distribute the
cooling air to the stator. The baffle chamber directs cooled gas to the outer
circumference 98 of the stator. The plenum chamber may include baffles that
optimally distribute the flow of cooling gas over the stator and into the stator cooling
passages 100. The outer walls of the plenum chamber may also include an exhaust
port 102 that bleeds cooling gas 103 from the chamber to the end of the stator and
over the end-turns 104 of the stator coils 106.
Heat is extracted from the stator coils as the cooling gas passes through the stator
cooling passages 100. TEe passages may be arranged in the stator to optimize the
cooling of the stator coils. For example, the frequency of cooling passages along the
stator axis and/or the cross-sectional area of the passages may be selected to evenly
distribute cooling in the stator or to otherwise optimize stator cooling.
The heated cooling gas flows from the stator passages 100 into the air gap 88. The
cooling gas is drawn through the gap by the fan 84 and passage 82, where the cooling
gas is then cooled by the heat exchanger 92 and recirculated back through the stator.
The ventilation system 82 may be a closed gas system wherein cooling gas, e.g.,
hydrogen or air, is circulated through the stator, heat exchanger and plenum to cool
the stator.
In a closed loop ventilation system 82 for a machine with a superconducting rotor, the
cooling gas such as air or hydrogen is circulated from the heat exchangers) 92
through the stator cooling passages 100 to extract heat from the stator coils, the air
gap 88 to an axial fan 84, and back to the heat exchanger. The cold cooling gas,
exiting from the heat exchangers, cools the stator core and stator winding. The space
between stator end winding 104 and machine flange has one gas flow path 89 to duct
the hot gas from the fan 84 to the heat exchangers. This one gas passage simplifies
the complexity of the reverse flow ventilation system of conventional machines which
have two flow paths (see Fig. 2 and passages 34 and 39).
The stator cooling system is also applicable for synchronous machines where a
conventional rotor is replaced with a superconducting rotor. In such a case, the
forward or reverse flow ventilation system of the original machine may be converted
to the reverse flow system shown in FIGURES 3, 4 or 5.
FIGURE 5 shows an open-loop reverse flow ventilation system 108 in which cooling
gases are drawn from an outside source, e.g., ambient air (arrows 110), and pass
through as an input port 112. The cool inlet gas passes through the baffle chamber 94,
stator passages 100, air gap 88 and the fan 84 in a manner similar to the flow of
cooling gas in the closed ventilation system 82. The fan moves the heated air out
from the air gap and provides the driving force to draw air through the ports 112 and
through the stator. In an open loop system, air, is drawn into the machine through
inlets and vented back to the environment through discharge ducts 114. Thus, heat
exchangers and other passages are unnecessary in an open system.
The ventilation systems shown in FIGURES 4 and 5 may be applied to polyphase
alternating current (AC) machines with a superconducting (SC) rotor and a stator
carrying polyphase AC winding(s).
While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently
considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is to be understood
that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiment, but on the
contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements
included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
WE CLAIM:
1. A superconducting electromagnetic machine (50) comprising:
a solid core rotor (64) having a cryogenically cooled superconducting
rotor coil winding (66);
a stator (52) coaxial with said rotor and having stator coils (106)
magnetically coupled with said superconducting rotor coil winding, said stator
coils arranged around said rotor, and said stator having cooling passages
(100) extending from an outer periphery (48) of the stator to an inner
periphery (56) of the stator, said inner periphery separated from the rotor by
an annular air gap (88);
said rotor having cooling passages for a cryogenic cooling fluid;
characterized in that said superconducting electromagnetic machine (50)
comprising,
an annular air gap between said solid core rotor and said stator, wherein
said annular gap having at least one lateral opening comprising a cooling gas
passage port and said annular gap being substantially open along a length of
said rotor;
a stator ventilation system (82,94) providing a cooling gas to said outer
periphery of the stator and said passages (100) of the stator, wherein
substantially all of said cooling gas flows through said annular gap and
through said cooling gas passage port,
wherein said ventilation system comprises a plurality of baffle chambers
adjacent said outer periphery of the stator, wherein said baffle chambers
comprise a first chamber having an outer cooling gas inlet port open-to a
source of cooling gas and a second chamber having cooling gas inlet port
open to said first chamber, and wherein said first and second chambers each
have cooling gas outlets to said rotor.
2. A superconducting electromagnetic machine as claimed in claim 1 wherein
the cooling gas (86) exists the stator at said cooling gas passage port open to
the annular air gap (88).
3. A superconducting electromagnetic machine as claimed in claim 1 wherein
said ventilation system (82) comprises a heat exchanger (92).
4. A superconducting electromagnetic machine as claimed in claim 1 wherein
said rotor comprises a superconducting coil (66), and said rotor cooling
system (75) provides cryogenic cooling fluid to said coil.
5. A superconducting electromagnetic machine as claimed in claim 1 which is
an electromagnetic generator.
6. A synchronous machine as claimed in claim 1 which is a motor.
7. A superconducting electromagnetic machine as claimed in claim 1 herein
said ventilation system is a reverse flow ventilation system.
8. A superconducting electromagnetic machine as claimed in claim 1 wherein
said ventilation system is a closed-loop system in which a cooling gas
circulates through the stator and a heat exchanger (92) in a flow path of the
gas.
9. A superconducting electromagnetic machine as claimed in claim 1 wherein
said stator cooling passages are adjacent and orthogonal to said stator coils.
10.A method for cooling a superconducting electromagnetic machine (50)
having a solid core rotor (64) comprising a superconducting rotor coil winding
(66) and a stator (52) and a stator ventilation system (82, 94), wherein the
cooling method comprises cryogenically cooling the rotor coil winding (66),
characterized in that said method comprises the steps of:
a. cooling the stator (52) with a cooling gas flowing through the
stator, wherein said cooling gas enters an outer periphery of the stator from
a plurality of baffle chambers and wherein a first baffle chamber has a
cooling gas input port open to a source of cooling gas and a second
baffle chamber has an input port open to the first baffle chamber, and
b. drawing substantially all of the cooling gas out of the stator into air
gap (88) between the stator and the rotor core, wherein the cooling gas
flows through the air gap without flowing through the rotor core.
11. A method for cooling as claimed in claim 10 wherein the cooling gas flows
into an outer periphery (98) of the stator, through stator cooling gas
passages (100) and out into the air gap (88).
12. A method for cooling as claimed in claim 10 wherein said cooling gas is
drawn by a fan (84) out of the air gap and is exhausted out of the machine..
13.A method for cooling as claimed in claim 10 wherein said cooling gas is
drawn by a fan (84) out of the air gap and is directed to a heat exchanger
(92), and said method further comprises extracting heat from the cooling gas
by the heat exchanger, and circulating the cooling gas through the stator and
the heat exchanger.
A superconducting electromagnetic machine (50) comprising a solid core
rotor (64) having a cryogenically cooled superconducting rotor coil winding
(66); a stator (52) coaxial with said rotor and having stator coils (106)
magnetically coupled with said superconducting rotor coil winding, said stator
coils arranged around said rotor, and said stator having cooling passages
(100) extending from an outer periphery (48) of the stator to an inner
periphery (56) of the stator, said inner periphery separated from the rotor by
an annular air gap (88); said rotor having cooling passages for a cryogenic
cooling fluid; characterized in that said superconducting electromagnetic
machine (50) comprising, an annular air gap between said solid core rotor
and said stator, wherein said annular gap having at least one lateral opening
comprising a cooling gas passage port and said annular gap being
substantially open along a length of said rotor; a stator ventilation system
(82,94) providing a cooling gas to said outer periphery of the stator and said
passages (100) of the stator, wherein substantially all of said cooling gas
flows through said annular gap and through said cooling gas passage port,
wherein said ventilation system comprises a plurality of baffle chambers
adjacent said outer periphery of the stator, wherein said baffle chambers
comprise a first chamber having an outer cooling gas inlet port open to a
source of cooling gas and a second chamber having cooling gas inlet port
open to said first chamber, and wherein said first and second chambers each
have cooling gas outlets to said rotor.

Documents:

451-cal-2002-granted-abstract.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-assignment.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-claims.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-correspondence.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-description (complete).pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-drawings.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-examination report.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-form 1.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-form 18.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-form 2.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-form 3.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-form 5.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-gpa.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-specification.pdf

451-cal-2002-granted-translated copy of priority document.pdf


Patent Number 224772
Indian Patent Application Number 451/CAL/2002
PG Journal Number 43/2008
Publication Date 24-Oct-2008
Grant Date 22-Oct-2008
Date of Filing 29-Jul-2002
Name of Patentee GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
Applicant Address ONE RIVER ROAD, SCHENECTADY, NEY YORK
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 WEEBER KONRAD ROMAN 785 RIVERVIEW ROAD, REXFORD, NEW YORK 12148
2 DAWSON RICHARD NILS 40 STONE ROAD, VOORHEEVILLE, NEW YORK 12186
PCT International Classification Number H 02 K 9/00
PCT International Application Number N/A
PCT International Filing date
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 09/929,287 2001-08-15 U.S.A.