Thermo 8e Chap 11 Lecture
Thermo 8e Chap 11 Lecture
Thermo 8e Chap 11 Lecture
8th Edition
CHAPTER 11
REFRIGERATION CYCLES
Lecture slides by
Mehmet Kanoglu
Copyright The McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Objectives
Introduce the concepts of refrigerators and heat pumps
and the measure of their performance.
Analyze the ideal vapor-compression refrigeration cycle.
Analyze the actual vapor-compression refrigeration cycle.
Review the factors involved in selecting the right
refrigerant for an application.
Discuss the operation of refrigeration and heat pump
systems.
Evaluate the performance of innovative vaporcompression refrigeration systems.
Analyze gas refrigeration systems.
Introduce the concepts of absorption-refrigeration
systems.
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REFRIGERATORS AND
HEAT PUMPS
The transfer of heat from a low-temperature
region to a high-temperature one requires
special devices called refrigerators.
Another device that transfers heat from a lowtemperature medium to a high-temperature
one is the heat pump.
Refrigerators and heat pumps are essentially
the same devices; they differ in their
objectives only.
ACTUAL VAPOR-COMPRESSION
REFRIGERATION CYCLE
An actual vapor-compression refrigeration cycle differs
from the ideal one owing mostly to the irreversibilities
that occur in various components, mainly due to fluid
friction (causes pressure drops) and heat transfer to or
from the surroundings.
DIFFERENCES
Non-isentropic compression
Superheated vapor at evaporator exit
Subcooled liquid at condenser exit
Pressure drops in condenser and evaporator
The COP
decreases as a
result of
irreversibilities.
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Actual refrigeration cycles are not as efficient as ideal ones like the Carnot cycle
because of the irreversibilities involved. But the conclusion we can draw from Eq.
119 that the COP is inversely proportional to the temperature difference TH - TL
is equally valid for actual refrigeration cycles.
The goal of a second-law or exergy analysis of a refrigeration system is to
determine the components that can benefit the most by improvements.
This is done identifying the locations of greatest exergy destruction and the
components with the lowest exergy or second-law efficiency.
Exergy destruction in a component can be determined directly from an exergy
balance or by using
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Note that when TL = T0, which is often the case for heat pumps,
II,evap = 0 since there is no recoverable exergy in this case.
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Total exergy
destruction
Second-law (exergy) efficiency
T0 = TH for a
refrigeration cycle
This second-law efficiency definition accounts for all
irreversibilities associated within the refrigerator, including the
heat transfers with the refrigerated space 11
and the environment.
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INNOVATIVE VAPOR-COMPRESSION
REFRIGERATION SYSTEMS
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Cascade
Refrigeration
Systems
Cascading
improves the
COP of a
refrigeration
system.
Some systems
use three or four
stages of
cascading.
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Liquefaction of Gases
Many important scientific and engineering
processes at cryogenic temperatures (below
about 100C) depend on liquefied gases
including the separation of oxygen and nitrogen
from air, preparation of liquid propellants for
rockets, the study of material properties at low
temperatures, and the study of superconductivity.
The storage (i.e., hydrogen) and
transportation of some gases (i.e., natural
gas) are done after they are liquefied at very
low temperatures. Several innovative cycles
are used for the liquefaction of gases.
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The gas refrigeration cycles have lower COPs relative to the vaporcompression refrigeration cycles or the reversed Carnot cycle.
The reversed Carnot cycle consumes a fraction of the net work (area 1A3B)
but produces a greater amount of refrigeration (triangular area under B1).
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Summary
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