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How Air Cooled Chillers Work

Basics of how Air Cooled Chillers work

By
Paul Evans
-
Aug 14, 2017
5
23592

How Air Cooled Chillers work


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In this article we will be looking at how air cooled chillers work. Air cooled chillers are very
common, especially in small to medium size commercial and office type buildings. They are
usually located externally, either up on the roof or at ground level. This is because Air Cooled
Chillers do not use cooling towers, instead they dump their heat into the ambient air and
therefore need access to a lot of fresh air, in order to reject the unwanted heat from the building.
Scroll to the bottom to watch the tutorial video on this subject.
How Air Cooled Chillers work – animation

The chillers will produce “chilled water” which is pumped out around the building to the Air
Handling Units (AHU’s) and Fan Coil Units (FCU’s) Which remove the unwanted heat from the
building and transfer it into the chilled water loop. The chilled water will enter the AHU’s/FCU’s
at around 6°C (42.8°F) and by the time it leaves the heat exchanger within the AHU/FCU it will
have risen to around 12°C (53.6°F) and will then make its way back to the Air Cooled Chiller to
dump this heat into the atmosphere before repeating the cycle.

The warm return “chilled water” only enters the evaporator where it passes along the outside
surface area of the inner tubes, which contain the refrigerant, it then exits at the opposite end
having given up its thermal energy. The refrigerant is the only fluid which moves around each of
the components of the chiller. It changes its pressure, temperature, enthalpy and entroy as it
moves around the machine and transports the unwanted heat away from the evaporator chilled
water.

The Air Cooled Chiller has 5 main components.

1. The compressor – typically screw, scroll or reciprocating


2. The condenser – a bundle of horizontal pipes which contain the hot refrigerant, these are
surrounded by a number of thin sheets of metal in the vertical axis. These help distribute
heat away from the tubes and into the air which is blown across the tubes and thin sheets
of metal.
3. Condenser fans – These suck air across the condenser coils, entering from the sides, and
then force this air out the top of the unit upwards into the ambient atmosphere.
4. Expansion Valve – This expands the refrigerant before it enters the evaporator
5. Evaporator – This is where the chilled water is produced and the heat from the warm
return “chilled water” is extracted, to be sent to the condenser.

Main components of an Air Cooled Chiller


How the refrigerant moves around the chiller

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How refrigerant changes around an air cooled


chiller

The compressor is the driving force of the refrigerant. The refrigerant first leaves the compressor
as a high pressure, high temperature, superheated vapour and then enters the condenser.

When the refrigerant enters into the condenser, it will run along the horizontal pipes and transfer
its thermal energy into the ambient air stream which is forced by the fans on top.

As the refrigerant transfers its thermal energy, it begins to condense into a liquid. By the time the
refrigerant leaves the condenser, it will be a high pressure, medium temperature, saturated liquid.

Next the refrigerant enters the expansion valve. The expansion valve meters the flow of
refrigerant around the system. The most basic type is the thermal expansion valve which controls
the flow of refrigerant by measuring the pipe temperature at the evaporator outlet and will adjust
the flow rate to keep the temperature within a desired setpoint.

The expansion valve holds back the refrigerant and maintains the high pressure of the condenser.
Inside the expansion valve, a small orifice allows a restricted amount of refrigerant to continue to
flow. As it flows through this restriction it reaches the low pressure side of the valve. This
sudden pressure drop allows the refrigerant to expand from a liquid into a liquid/vapour mixture.
As this occurs it will drop in pressure and temperature. The same amount of refrigerant flows
through, it just has more space so it expands to fill this gap.

The refrigerant then enters the evaporator and will pass through a series of horizontal tubes
which are surrounded by the “chilled water” and these will flow in the opposing, counter flow to
each other. By the time the refrigerant leaves the evaporator, it will have picked up the unwanted
heat from the return chilled water and will leave as a low pressure, low temperature saturated
vapour. The chilled water will have given its thermal energy up to the refrigerant and will leave
around 6°C (42.8°F).

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