Refrigerant systems are known and utilized to condition a secondary fluid, such as air, to be delivered into a climate-controlled environment. Typically, a compressor compresses a refrigerant and delivers that refrigerant to an outdoor heat exchanger, known as a condenser for subcritical applications and as a gas cooler for transcritical applications. From the outdoor heat exchanger, the refrigerant passes through an expansion device, and then to an indoor heat exchanger, known as an evaporator.
An optional refrigerant system feature is a reheat circuit. In a reheat circuit, a refrigerant is passed through a heat exchanger located downstream in the path of air having passed over an evaporator. A control for the refrigerant system may then control the evaporator operation such that it will initially cool the air below a temperature that is desired by an occupant of the environment to be conditioned. This allows the removal of extra moisture from the air. The air then passes downstream over the reheat heat exchanger, and is warmed back to the desired temperature. The refrigerant system incorporating a reheat circuit provides the ability to remove additional moisture from the air stream, when dehumidification is desired and no or little cooling is required.
One known reheat option is a “hot gas” reheat system. In a hot gas reheat system, the refrigerant passed through the reheat heat exchanger is tapped from a location intermediate the compressor and the condenser or a gas cooler (the outdoor heat exchanger will be referred to as a condenser throughout the text). In such systems, at times the refrigerant system may be called on to provide dehumidification without any cooling being provided for the air. Air conditioning systems are generally designed to provide cooling, or sensible capacity, as the primary function. They are not typically designed to provide latent capacity, and dehumidification is typically a by-product of the cooling process. Thus, when a system is called upon to provide only dehumidification, there are some challenges present for a refrigerant system designer.
Refrigerant systems having hot gas reheat circuits have been somewhat inflexible in providing strictly latent capacity, or dehumidification into an air stream supplied into a conditioned environment. The refrigerant systems have easily provided neutral air temperature only at a single design point, while providing sensible (cooling or heating) at all other off-design conditions. Thus, these refrigerant systems have been somewhat lacking design flexibility in satisfying comfort requirements in a climate-controlled environment and causing discomfort to an occupant of a conditioned space. Therefore, there is a need for adaptive reheat systems, and hot gas reheat systems in particular, which would meet both temperature and humidity demands at a variety of environmental conditions and internal/external thermal loads.
A refrigerant system has a compressor for compressing and delivering refrigerant to a condenser. Refrigerant from the condenser passes through an expansion device, and then to an evaporator. A reheat circuit includes a reheat valve for selectively tapping at least a potion of refrigerant from a location downstream of the compressor and upstream of the condenser. The reheat refrigerant passes through a reheat heat exchanger positioned to be in a path of air having passed over the evaporator, and to be delivered into an indoor environment to be conditioned. At least one refrigerant flow control device such as valve is included to control the amount of refrigerant passing through the reheat heat exchanger. A control for the refrigerant system is operable to receive inputs regarding conditions of the indoor environment, and to control the at least one valve to achieve a desired amount of dehumidification in the indoor environment.
These and other features of the present invention can be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
As typically incorporated in prior art systems, the three-way valve 30 is operable to either send the entire refrigerant flow through the reheat heat exchanger 32, or bypass it. It is typically not able to modulate or vary the amount of refrigerant through the reheat circuit. Thus, such refrigerant systems have to run in a “digital” mode to satisfy thermal load demands in the conditioned space X and are inflexible in operation and control, as mentioned above.
In the refrigerant system 20, a refrigerant bypass line 38 and an associated refrigerant flow control device such as valve 40, selectively bypass at least some amount of refrigerant around the reheat circuit, in the reheat mode of operation. A control 100 for the refrigerant system can achieve precise dehumidification, or latent conditioning, of air delivered to the indoor environment X, with or without any appreciable temperature change, by controlling the exact amount of refrigerant which passes through the reheat heat exchanger 32, in relation to the amount of refrigerant passing through the evaporator 26. A worker of ordinary skill in the art would recognize how the controlled amount of refrigerant that passes through the reheat heat exchanger 32 would achieve this desired air conditioning (temperature and humidity). The air would be overcooled in the evaporator 26 to remove the desired amount of moisture from the air stream and obtain the required humidity level, and then would be heated back toward the target temperature by the refrigerant flowing through the reheat heat exchanger 32. For instance, by controlling a precise amount of refrigerant passing through the reheat heat exchanger 32, the designer will be able to achieve the desired dehumidification with little or no temperature change. The valve 40 could be, for example, a simple on/off solenoid valve controlled by one of pulse width modulation techniques or a regulating valve with an adjustable opening controlled by a stepper motor.
A control 100 that operates the valves 30 and 40, and may be a general control for the refrigerant system 20. Control 100 takes in signals from thermostat T and humidistat H (or any equivalent devices) and controls the refrigerant system 20, at least in part based on these inputs. A worker ordinarily skilled in the art will be able to provide an appropriate design and control sequence based upon the disclosure of this invention.
Although an embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US09/55707 | 9/2/2009 | WO | 00 | 2/22/2011 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61102021 | Oct 2008 | US |