Energy-saving method checks refrigerant level in air conditionersJune 24, 2009WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Engineers have developed a technique that saves energy and servicing costs by indicating when air conditioners are low on refrigerant, preventing the units from working overtime. The new "virtual refrigerant charge sensor" is particularly practical for automotive air conditioners, which tend to leak refrigerant more than other types of units, and also for household central air conditioning units, said James Braun, a professor of mechanical engineering. Maintaining the proper "charge," or amount of refrigerant in a system, saves energy because air conditioners low on refrigerant must operate longer to achieve the same degree of cooling as properly charged units. "Not only does the energy efficiency go down, but you also reduce the lifetime of the unit because it has to work harder, causing parts to wear out faster," Braun said. "It's also very time consuming and costly to have a technician check the refrigerant and charge it up to specification. To accurately learn how much charge is in the system, you have to remove all of the refrigerant and weigh it, a procedure that requires a vacuum pump and is quite time consuming." The new alternative works by using sensors to monitor the temperature of refrigerant at various points along the tubing in an air-conditioning unit. The technique is easy to use because the sensors are simply attached to the outside of the tubing, Braun said. Researchers tested the system on various types of air conditioners running on conventional refrigerants, including R-22 and the more environmentally friendly R-410A, which is replacing R-22 in the latest units. The research has been funded by the California Energy Commission through its Public Interest Energy Research, or PIER, program. Findings are detailed in a research paper presented June 22 during a meeting of the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers in Louisville, Ky. The technique also was described in a paper published in the journal HVAC&R Research. The paper was written by Braun and former mechanical engineering doctoral student Haorong Li, who is now an assistant professor of architectural engineering at the University of Nebraska. Another research project at Purdue is nearing completion and has involved a more extensive evaluation of the virtual charge sensor. The project, also funded through California's PIER program, has been led by graduate student Woohyun Kim. Purdue has applied for a patent on the technique, developed in research based at the university's Ray W. Herrick Laboratories. Li and Braun created a software algorithm that interprets temperature-sensor data to estimate the amount of refrigerant in the system. The four sensors are attached to tubing running into and out of components called heat exchangers. In air conditioning and refrigeration systems, liquid refrigerant evaporates in a heat exchanger called an evaporator, cooling the air. The refrigerant vapor turns back into a liquid in another heat exchanger called a condenser. During these evaporation and condensing steps, the refrigerant undergoes dramatic temperature changes. Automotive air conditioning units equipped with the new refrigerant-charge system could activate a warning light on a car's dashboard. Technicians servicing home air conditioners might simply plug a personal digital assistant into the unit to read the refrigerant-charge information, Braun said. Researchers began developing the technique four years ago. "The method could be commercialized if a company invested some time in the implementation side," Braun said. Purdue University |
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| Related Refrigerant Current Events and Refrigerant News Articles Cool! Nanoparticle research points to energy savings Adding just the right dash of nanoparticles to standard mixes of lubricants and refrigerants could yield the equivalent of an energy-saving chill pill for factories, hospitals, ships, and others with large cooling systems, suggest the latest results from National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) research that is pursuing promising formulations. Tiny refrigerator taking shape to cool future computers Researchers at Purdue University are developing a miniature refrigeration system small enough to fit inside laptops and personal computers, a cooling technology that would boost performance while shrinking the size of computers. Giant magnetocaloric materials could have large impact on the environment Materials that change temperature in magnetic fields could lead to new refrigeration technologies that reduce the use of greenhouse gases, thanks to new research at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory and Ames National Laboratory. More efficient and ecological system for the production of electricity, cold and heat IK4 is taking part in a European project the aim of which is to design a single installation that will, at the same time, produce electricity, cold and heat for domestic use, while affording a notable reduction in environmental impact. The tropics may be expanding Atmospheric temperature measurements by U.S. weather satellites indicate Earth's hot, tropical zone has expanded farther from the equator since 1979, says a study by scientists from the University of Utah and University of Washington. Avenir Energie's Geopack pumps up the energy Geopack, the latest geothermal heating system from Avenir Energie, is on show at Frankfurt's ISH Trade Fair from 15 to 19 March 2005. Designed to meet all the heating needs of a typical domestic house or similar building, Geopack captures the free and unlimited energy that naturally exists in the soil, and converts it to a useable form via a heat-pump generator. The hot water produced is used in a traditional water based under-floor or radiator based system to provide perfect comfort at around a quarter of the cost of other typical central heating systems. Researchers at the University Jaume I put environmentally-friendly refrigerants to the test Keeping food cool in the fridge or switching on the air conditioning at the office can be costly for the environment. The gases that have been used up till now for refrigeration (mainly the so-called HCFCs, such as R22) contain high proportions of chlorine, one of the elements responsible for the depletion of atmospheric ozone. Manufacturing new refrigerating equipment that requires the use of these gases is now forbidden by law and new ones have therefore been designed that have less impact on the environment. These new products are known as environmentally-friendly refrigerants. Yet the companies that install these systems are still wary about whether these new compounds perform as well as A more silent and ecological refrigerator with more precise temperature maintenance The Thermal Engineering group of researchers at the Public University of Navarre is working on the design of a domestic thermoelectric refrigerator. Unlike the conventional system of producing a cold environment - by vapour compression - the thermoelectricity used in the design of this refrigerator allows the manufacture of more compact and quieter units which respect the environment more. This first prototype of the thermoelectric domestic refrigerator, commissioned by the multinational BSH Siemens, will be ready in January 2004. Moreover, in current domestic refrigerators the motor cuts in and cuts out, something which does not happen with thermoelectricity and, thus, maintaining the tempe Appliance of science tackles UK fridge mountain PIONEERING technology developed at Manchester Metropolitan University is set to tackle Britain`s growing fridge mountain and help save the environment. Scientists in the Department of Chemistry and Materials have developed the technique in response to new CFC controls which ban the consignment of fridges to landfill waste sites. Britons throw out an estimated 1.5m fridges every year but not a single one can be safely disposed of under the controls which came into force on January 1 2002. The new process, perfected by Dr Michele Edge, will strip harmful CFC gases from the foam lining inside old fridges and leave them safe for scrap. Partner the Connell Group, from Oldham, successfully test-ra More Refrigerant Current Events and Refrigerant News Articles |
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