The present invention relates to condensers, and more particularly to configuring a condensing unit for an air-conditioning or refrigeration system.
Traditional cooling systems, such as refrigeration and air-conditioning systems, include a compressor, a condensing unit, an expansion valve and an evaporator. The compressor compresses gaseous refrigerant exiting the evaporator and discharges the high pressure refrigerant to the condensing unit. The condensing unit operates as a heat exchanger enabling heat transfer from the gaseous refrigerant to a heat sink (e.g. air or water). The refrigerant condenses within the condensing unit and a state change occurs from gas to liquid. The liquid refrigerant exits the condensing unit and flows to the evaporator through the expansion valve. The evaporator also operates as a heat exchanger enabling heat transfer from the atmosphere surrounding the evaporator to the liquid refrigerant. As the heat transfer occurs, the temperature of the refrigerant increases until a state change occurs from liquid to gas. The gas refrigerant is drawn into the suction side of the compressor and the cooling cycle continues.
The condensing unit can be one of an air-cooled condensing unit (ACU) or a water-cooled condensing unit (WCU). An ACU typically includes a fin-tube refrigerant-to-air heat exchanger, an air flow device such as a fan motor and fan blade and associated controls (not shown). In the case of an ACU, air provides the heat sink enabling heat transfer from the condensing unit. A WCU typically includes a refrigerant-to-water heat exchanger and associated controls (not shown). In the case of a WCU, water provides the heat sink enabling heat transfer from the condensing unit.
The particular configuration of the condensing unit depends on various system parameters including the compressor, heat exchanger, controls, refrigerant type, operating temperatures and the like. As a result, repetitive design and testing steps are typically required to provide an appropriate condensing unit for a given cooling system.
The present invention provides a system and method for knowledge-based configuration of a condensing unit for a cooling system. The method includes inputting one of a cooling system characteristic, a condensing unit characteristic, a compressor characteristic for the cooling system and accessing design rules and a database of valid component relationships and their attributes. A base condensing unit is determined based on the one of a cooling system characteristic, a condensing unit characteristic and a compressor characteristic for the cooling system. The method further includes selecting desired accessories for customizing the base condensing unit.
In one feature, the cooling system characteristic includes a cooling system capacity.
In another feature, the cooling system characteristic includes a cooling system horsepower.
In another feature, the cooling system characteristic includes design criteria. The design criteria includes at least one of a group consisting of refrigerant type, temperature range, evaporator temperature, normal air temperature, maximum air temperature, frequency, phase and voltage.
In another feature, the condensing unit characteristic includes a condensing unit model number.
In another feature, the compressor characteristic is a compressor model number.
In still another feature, the method further comprises determining the price of the configured condensing unit and outputting a quote (spec) sheet summarizing key characteristics and bill-of-materials of the condensing unit cost.
In another feature, the accessories include at least one of a group consisting of an accumulator, a filter drier, a moisture indicator, a shrader fitting, a discharge line thermostat, a crankcase heater, a monel discharge tube, a conduit, a service cord, a base mounted electrical box, condenser end covers, a fan guard and a defrost timer.
In another feature, the method further comprises determining high and low side options such as low ambient controls, pressure vessel (receiver) and shut-off valves.
In yet another feature, the method further comprises determining various pressure control options for the base condensing unit.
Another feature provides embedded rules to verify if the configuration meets Underwriter Laboratories safety regulations.
Further areas of applicability of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description provided hereinafter. It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating the preferred embodiment of the invention, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
The present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following description of the preferred embodiments is merely exemplary in nature and is in no way intended to limit the invention, its application, or uses.
Referring now to
The condensing unit configurator is provided as a software package that enables easy entry of pertinent data, as well as automatic access to engineering design rules and various databases containing pertinent component attributes and their relationship information. As a software package, the condensing unit configurator quickly and seamlessly determines the configuration of the condensing unit 14 and provides comprehensive performance information. More specifically, the condensing unit configurator provides a rule-based algorithm that automates the engineering design and associated processes used to streamline the design process.
The configurator incorporates engineering design standards, Underwriter Laboratories (UL) safety regulations and pricing information to provide a quick response to customer needs. A user inputs system requirements including thermal performance, application type and optional components. The condensing unit configurator generates information including standard, off-the-shelf products, custom design solutions, engineering drawings, thermal performance information, bill of material (BOM) identifying key components and pricing information.
The elements of the condensing unit configurator include component databases, engineering rules, design processes and pricing algorithms. Other elements include physical and electrical component relationships and thermodynamic algorithms. The configurator uses two component categories to configure valid condensing unit assemblies. A major components category is used to build the thermal capacity module of the condensing unit. The components in the major components category include compressors, heat exchangers, air flow devices (e.g., fan motor and fan blade) and mounting chassis. An optional components category does not effect thermal performance, but is used for other functions of the condensing unit. The components in the optional components category include controls, pressure vessels, valves, fittings, electrical boxes and the like.
Referring now to
Using the application requirements path, the user enters the capacity (Btu/hour or horsepower), electrical parameters (e.g., volts, frequency, phase), refrigerant type and application type (e.g., high, medium and low temperature installation). Using the condensing unit model number path, the user inputs a known, standard off-the-shelf unit. The configurator assists the user in modifying the standard unit by selecting optional components (i.e., custom design). Using the compressor model path, the user inputs a specific compressor model, its electrical parameters, refrigerant type and application type.
The configurator lists condensing units that feature the selected compressor model. In step 100, the user selects between the application requirements path, the condensing unit model number path or the compressor model path (see
In step 102, the user inputs the application parameters. The application parameters include design criteria, mode and application type. More specifically, the design criteria include refrigerant type, application range, evaporator temperature, normal ambient temperature, maximum ambient temperature and electrical information (e.g., frequency, phase and voltage). The application types indicate the particular type of fixture (e.g., walk-in, reach-in, environmental/medical, industrial, other or unknown). The key application parameter is the mode, which includes either capacity or horsepower.
In step 108, the configurator determines condensing units based on the application parameters and provides an output screen based on the particular mode (see
In step 104, the user inputs known, relevant condensing unit information (see
The user can immediately select a condensing unit model number. However, if the user is unsure of the exact model number, the condensing unit model number list narrows based on the condensing unit information input. In other words, the condensing unit model number list gradually becomes shorter as information such as refrigerant type, application range, voltage, application type and the like are input. In step 110, the user selects the exact condensing unit desired. As shown in
In step 106, the user inputs known, relevant compressor information (see
The user can immediately select a compressor model number. However, if the user is unsure of the exact model number, the compressor model number list narrows based on the compressor information input. In other words, the compressor model number list gradually becomes shorter as information such as refrigerant type, application range, voltage, application type and the like are input. In step 112, the user selects the exact compressor desired. As shown in
Regardless of the path used to determine the base condensing unit (i.e., major components category), the configurator continues in steps 114, 116 and 118 to determine the desired options (i.e., optional components category) for air-cooled condensing units. In step 114, the user selects desired accessories from an accessory menu (see
In step 116, the user indicates desired high and low side options (see
In step 118, the user indicates desired pressure control options (see
Having selected the desired options in steps 114, 116 and 118 configuration of the condensing unit is complete. The condensing unit configurator of the present invention provides additional business and customer-service information capabilities, such as developing reports (step 120), which will be discussed more fully below.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Thermal performance information is generated by choosing the Unit Performance View button. Thermodynamic algorithms are integrated in the configurator to generate thermal performance based on the configured components of the condensing unit. Default performance data is provided for standard ambient air conditions (e.g., 70-100° F., 75-105° F., 80-110° F., 85-115° F., 90° F.-120° F., 95-125° F. or 100-130° F.) (see
The configurator also enables saving of the condensing unit configuration for future retrieval and editing. This is accessed by choosing the Commit Changes to Database button. This function saves data in a database on a network. The Save button saves data to the local hard drive of the user's computer. The objective of saving to local hard drive is for cases where the configurations are not finalized and have not been submitted to the customer.
The description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the invention. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/477,562, filed on Jun. 11, 2003.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6002854 | Lynch et al. | Dec 1999 | A |
6836766 | Gilpin et al. | Dec 2004 | B1 |
7003477 | Zarrow | Feb 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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H9-257319 | Oct 1997 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050004693 A1 | Jan 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60477562 | Jun 2003 | US |