The present invention is directed, in general, to air conditioning systems and, more particularly, to a field-installed, system pressure actuated charge compensator not requiring brazing.
In heat pump systems, the volume ratio is the internal volume of the outdoor coil versus the internal volume of the indoor coil. The indoor and outdoor coils in conventional heat pump systems are of the appropriate size to run efficiently in cooling and heating mode. When upgrading older heat pump systems from a low SEER rating to SEER 13 or higher in order to improve cooling performance, an imbalance can occur as the volume ratio changes. When the indoor coil volume is smaller than the outdoor coil volume, the system has a high volume ratio. Conversely, when the indoor coil volume is greater than the outdoor coil volume, the system has a low volume ratio. These conditions create an imbalance in the amount of refrigerant charge needed as the heat pump changes from heating to cooling mode, i.e., the system needs more refrigerant during the cooling cycle than during the heating cycle. Existing charge compensators comprise a tank with a vapor tube passing through the tank, but the vapor tube is not open to the tank. The tank inner volume is connected to the liquid line and the excess charge is thermally drawn into the tank when the tube is cold during the heating mode; the charge is thermally driven out during the cooling mode when the tube is warm during the cooling mode. This type of compensator, if used in the field, must be brazed into the system to assure that the system is vapor tight. This requires that the refrigerant charge be removed, the system be opened, the compensator brazed in place by a technician, and the total system be evacuated and recharged.
Accordingly, what is needed in the art is a charge compensator that does not require brazing the compensator into the liquid and vapor lines.
To address the above-discussed deficiencies of the prior art, the present invention provides, in one aspect, a charge compensator that is pressure activated for use with a heat pump having a liquid service valve and a vapor service valve. The charge compensator comprises a holding tank having first and second ports, a first pressure tap coupled to the first port and removeably coupleable to the vapor service valve, and a second pressure tap coupled to the second port and removeably coupleable to the liquid service valve. A heat pump system and a method of manufacturing a charge compensator are also provided.
The foregoing has outlined features of the present invention so that those skilled in the pertinent art may better understand the detailed description of the invention that follows. Additional features of the invention will be described hereinafter that form the subject of the claims of the invention. Those skilled in the pertinent art should appreciate that they can readily use the disclosed conception and specific embodiment as a basis for designing or modifying other structures for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention. Those skilled in the pertinent art should also realize that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention.
For a more complete understanding of the invention, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, in which:
Referring initially to
Referring now to
To install the charge compensator kit 100 on the heat pump external unit 200, the system refrigerant charge is first pumped into the outdoor heat exchanger 210. The second pressure tap 122 is removeably coupled to the liquid service valve 250 and the first pressure tap 121 is removeably coupled to the vapor service valve 230. The TXV sensing bulb 170 is coupled to the vapor line 220 and is covered with insulation 260. When the physical installation is complete, the system may be evacuated through first and second auxiliary ports 123, 124 on the first and second pressure taps 121, 122 as required. The refrigerant charge is then released from the outdoor heat exchanger 210 and the system is ready for operation.
The proposed field installed system works based on the pressure difference between the common liquid refrigerant line 240 and the common vapor refrigerant line 220. In the cooling mode the common vapor pressure is lower than the common liquid pressure. Conversely, the common vapor pressure is higher in the heating mode. During operation of the heat pump system in heating mode, excess refrigerant charge is routed into the tank 110 through the liquid line 140 and the TXV 160 controlled by the TXV sensing bulb 170. Note that the vapor line does not pass through the tank 110, but rather opens into the tank 110. This allows the tank to operate has a reservoir and therefore is actively controlled by operation of the TXV 160 in contrast to the passive operation in the prior art of relying on the temperature of the refrigerant passing through the central vapor line to withdraw from or return excess refrigerant to the system. This provides a more accurate relationship of available charge to the required refrigerant capacity. During operation of the heat pump system in cooling mode, refrigerant charge held in the tank 110 is released into the vapor line 130 through the check valve 150. During the heating mode, the vapor line 220 is at a higher pressure than the liquid line 140; this allows liquid refrigerant to accumulate in the tank 110.
Referring now to
Thus, a field-installed charge compensator kit has been described. The charge compensator kit may be installed on the vapor and liquid service valves of an external heat pump heat exchanger so as to compensate for different charges required for heating vs. cooling when the indoor and outdoor heat exchangers are of different sizes. This condition is regularly encountered when the outdoor heat exchanger is upgraded to improve cooling performance.
Although the present invention has been described in detail, those skilled in the pertinent art should understand that they can make various changes, substitutions and alterations herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention in its broadest form.