The present invention relates to an improved transcritical vapour compression refrigeration system, apparatus and method, and a compressor for use in the apparatus.
Vapour compression refrigerating systems can be arranged so that the condensed liquid refrigerant coming from the condenser at high pressure is sub-cooled to an intermediate temperature before being fed to an expansion device. Sub-cooling has the benefit of increasing the refrigerating effect per unit mass of the circulating refrigerant. This will improve the efficiency of the system provided the additional capacity produced is greater than the power increase required to produce it.
Systems which use this effect include two-stage systems with intermediate cooling and liquid pre-cooling, two-stage systems without intercooling but with liquid pre-cooling (such systems are generally known as “economised” systems) and single-stage screw compressor systems which draw a proportion of the refrigerant flow into an “economiser” port as vapour so that the remainder of the refrigerant flow is sub-cooled to economiser pressure
The technique of economising is particularly appropriate when refrigerants are being employed in ways which result in heat rejection at supercritical pressures, where the latent heat is non-existent. In these regions the use of sub-cooling by the economiser technique can produce increases in refrigerating capacity which are much greater than the extra power required to operate the economiser.
Refrigerants which might be expected to operate at pressures and temperatures in the regions of their critical points include ethylene (R-1150), nitrous oxide (R-744A), ethane (R-170), R507A, R508, trifluoromethane (R-23), R404A, R-410A, R-125, R-32 and carbon dioxide (R-744). It is comparatively easy to produce an economised system using either a screw compressor or a two-stage reciprocating compressor. It is not obvious how the effect of an economiser could be produced when using a single-stage reciprocating compressor. The Haslam Company of Derby patented a system in the 1920s, under which vapour was injected into the cylinder of a reciprocating compressor during the compression process (UK Patent Nos 165929 and 163769). The system does not seem to have been a commercial success.
Generally speaking, the following patent specifications disclose economised refrigeration systems: GB 2246852, GB 2286659, GB 2192735, GB 2180922, GB 1256391, EP 0529882, EP 0365351, U.S. Pat. No. 5,692,389, U.S. Pat. No. 5,095,712, U.S. Pat. No. 4,727,725 and EP 0921364. Single or multi-stage compression may be employed, but where compression is in multiple stages these operate in series.
Patent specification EP 0180904 discloses compression of parallel streams of vapour. However, this occurs at sub-critical pressures.
Use of carbon dioxide as a refrigerant for air conditioning fell out of use in the 1930s because it was simpler, cheaper and more efficient to use substances like R-12.
The main reason for lower efficiency of carbon dioxide systems is the low critical temperature of the refrigerant.
The effects of low critical temperature can be mitigated to some degree by using two-stage compression and an economiser to produce sub-cooling of the liquid refrigerant. However, the pressure ratios associated with systems for air conditioning are lower than would justify the adoption of two-stage compression.
The present invention broadly provides a transcritical vapour compression refrigerating system where refrigerant vapour is compressed to supercritical discharge pressure in two separate non-mixing streams, one coming from an economiser and the other coming from the main evaporator.
Thus, the present invention provides a transcritical vapour compression refrigeration apparatus which comprises;
The present invention relates in one embodiment to a system whereby the beneficial effects of economising can be obtained when using single-stage reciprocating compressors.
The term “gas cooler” is appropriate for a heat rejection device operating at transcritical pressures (i.e. from a supercritical to a subcritical pressure) since heat rejection does not result in liquifaction of refrigerant (as it does in a “condenser” operated at subcritical pressure). Thus, the term gas cooler has the same meaning as a condenser operating at supercritical pressure.
Thus, one embodiment of the invention consists of a transcritical vapour compression refrigeration system except that the single-stage reciprocating compressor, which is an essential component of the system, in the present invention, has some cylinders dedicated to the compression of refrigerant vapour being drawn from the evaporator to produce a refrigerating effect, and some cylinders dedicated to the compression of refrigerant vapour drawn from an economiser intermediate the first and second stages of expansion, to produce an increase of the refrigerating effect per unit mass of the refrigerant flowing through the evaporator
It is a surprising feature of the invention that, even when heat rejection is at transcritical pressures, the increase in refrigerating effect more than compensates for the extra power required to compress the refrigerant vapour from the economiser. The increased refrigerating effect derives from further cooling of the refrigerant in the economiser due to refrigerant vapourisation before the second expansion stage.
It is also surprising that the increased refrigerating effect, under certain conditions, also more than compensates for the reduction in apparently useful swept volume resulting from the dedication of some cylinders to compressing vapour from the economiser. The refrigerant capacity of the compressor, arranged so that only some of the cylinders draw refrigerant vapour from the main evaporator, is greater than if all cylinders had been arranged to draw vapour from the evaporator.
It can be shown that, for each compressor suction and discharge pressure, there is an optimum economiser pressure to produce maximum efficiency. The optimum economiser pressure corresponds to a particular ratio between the swept volume of cylinders dedicated to the main evaporator and the swept volume of cylinders dedicated to the economiser. The sets of cylinders compress two streams of refrigerant vapour in parallel, from evaporating pressure and from economiser pressure, to a common discharge pressure.
Although the invention is described with reference to a reciprocating compressor, the benefits of the invention can also be obtained with other types of compressor (e.g. centrifugal compressors, scroll compressors, screw compressors etc.) arranged to compress the two separate streams of vapour. Two such rotational compressors could be on a single rotating shaft.
The compressor is, however, preferably a reciprocating compressor having at least two cylinders, one for the first stream and one for the second stream. Generally, the cylinder swept volume for the first stream is less than that of the second stream (the main stream from the evaporator to provide cooling). Depending on the temperatures and pressures involved, the ratio of swept volume of the second stream to the first stream is preferably in the ratio of 1.1-11 to one, especially 1.3-2.5 to one. A preferred ratio is 1.4-1.8 to one. For air conditioning applications, a ratio of 2-3 to one is preferred. For freezing uses, a ratio of 5-7 to one is preferable. With a reciprocating compressor a ratio of 2 to one can be achieved by using a three cylinder compressor, two cylinders being dedicated to the second stream from the evaporator and one cylinder to the first stream from the economiser (the cylinders having identical swept volumes). Similarly, six cylinders can give a 5 to one swept volume ratio. Eight and twelve cylinders can give ratios of 7 to one and 11 to one respectively. Alternatively, the cylinders may have differing swept volumes. In this way, any desired ratio can be achieved.
The first and second compressed streams may be combined before passing to the gas cooler; or the separate streams could pass through separate gas coolers before being combined (or indeed could be combined part-way through the heat rejection stage). It is preferred, though, that the streams are combined before the first stage expansion step occurs.
Economiser constructions are well known to those skilled in the art. In essence, an economiser produces cooling by flashing-off a portion of the main liquid stream, thereby cooling it. Generally, the economiser is a vessel through which the main refrigerant flow to the evaporator passes; a portion being boiled off in a separate stream and thereby producing a cooling effect. Alternatively, the cooling effect may be applied indirectly to the main refrigerant stream by heat exchange e.g. in concentric tubes.
The preferred refrigerant is carbon dioxide (R-744). Other possible refrigerants include ethylene (R-1150), nitrous oxide (R-744A), ethane (R170), R-508 (an azeotrope of R-23 and R-116), trifluoromethane (R-23), R-410A (an azeotrope of R-32 and R-125), pentafluoroethane (R-125), R404A (a zeotrope of R125, R143a and R134a), R507A (an azeotrope of R125 and R143a) and difluoromethane (R-32).
Heat rejection in the gas cooler is typically at supercritical pressures, especially for carbon dioxide (R-744). The cooled refrigerant is generally at subcritical pressure.
The invention also relates to a compressor designed for the refrigeration apparatus; and to a method of refrigeration.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the drawings and supported by an Example which includes theoretical calculations. In the drawings:
The novel transcritical refrigerating cycle can be illustrated on a pressure/enthalpy diagram as indicated in
For clarity, the corresponding points are marked on
The refrigerating effect is the enthalpy at point (1) minus the enthalpy at point (6) (H1-H6). It can be seen that (H1-H6) is greater than (H1-H5).
It is common practice to seek improvements in refrigerating system efficiency by arranging a degree of heat exchange between high pressure refrigerant at point 5 and cool suction vapour at point 1. It has been found that, in the parallel compression system, there are no significant advantages to be gained from such heat exchange; but the invention could include systems with such heat exchange.
By way of illustration a circuit diagram of a parallel compression refrigerating system is shown in
The expanded refrigerant passes into an economiser vessel 7 containing refrigerant liquid and vapour. Cold high pressure vapour passes from the economiser to the suction inlet (not shown) of cylinder 11.
The liquid refrigerant passes to a low pressure expansion valve 8 where a second stage of expansion occurs, before the refrigerant passes into the evaporator 9 where a cooling effect is achieved. This second refrigerant stream then passes to the cylinder(s) 12 of the compressor, and the cycle repeats.
The method makes use of a single-stage, multi-cylinder, reciprocating compressor having two suction ports; one connected to the evaporator outlet and the other to an economiser designed to cool the main liquid flow. Compression of the two streams of refrigerant vapour takes place in parallel. The refrigerant streams do not mix until they reach discharge pressure at the compressor outlet.
Swept volumes associated with the individual suction connections are arranged to optimise performance at the intermediate pressure which gives highest efficiency.
Calculations
The following assumptions are made:
Refrigerant vapour from the evaporator is drawn into the suction port of the compressor and compressed in cylinders having appropriate swept volume for the purpose. At the same time, refrigerant vapour from the economiser is drawn into a separate set of cylinders at intermediate pressure and compressed to discharge pressures. The two streams of compressed refrigerant vapour are mixed at discharge pressure and piped to a high pressure heat exchanger where heat is rejected from the system. The heat rejection is at supercritical pressure. From the high pressure gas cooler, the refrigerant passes to a first stage expansion valve, where the pressure is reduced to economiser pressure. In the economiser, a portion of the refrigerant flow is evaporated and drawn to the economiser connection on the compressor. The remainder of the refrigerant is cooled as liquid to the saturation temperature corresponding to economiser pressure. The cooled liquid is then expanded to evaporator pressure through a second stage expansion valve. The refrigerant then passes through the evaporator, where heat is absorbed, and then to the suction port of the compressor, where the cycle recommences.
Cooling refrigerant liquid in the economiser results in an increase of refrigerating effect, which more than compensates for the power absorbed in the economiser section of the compressor. Thus the coefficient of performance (CoP) of the refrigerating system is increased.
The amount by which the CoP can be increased depends on the pressure ratio of the system, on the economiser pressure and the refrigerant temperature after heat rejection. Economiser pressure depends on the relative swept volumes of the compression streams of the compressor.
The process can be illustrated on a Mollier Diagram (
By way of example a calculation follows, showing the performance of a system operating in accordance with the previous assumptions, having an economiser pressure of 55 Bar A (18° C.) and assumed compression efficiency of 0.7.
From the Mollier Diagram and associated tables (not shown) it can be deduced that:
H1=731 (kJ/kg
H2=776
H3=715
H4=735
H5=588
H6=552
If it is assumed that the ratio of flow through the main evaporator to flow of refrigerant vapour from the economiser is as 1 is to x, then, H6+x.H3=H5.(1+x) from which it follows that
x=36/127=0.28
Refrigerating effect is H1-H6=179 kJ/Kg
Total power consumption is x(H4−H3)+(H2−H1)=51 kJ/kg
Therefore CoP=179/51=3.5
The calculation was repeated for various economiser pressures for systems with discharge pressure at 90 Bar A and evaporating temperature of +5° C. (40 Bar A).
The curve of CoP versus economiser pressure is shown in
Ratio of Swept Volumes
It is possible to calculate the ratio of cylinder swept volumes as follows:
Consider volumes pumped at 18° C. economising.
Mass flow is 0.28:1
Vs at +5° C.=0.0087296 m3/kg Pressure ratio 90/40=2.25 therefore V effy 0.90
Vs at +18° C.=0.0055647 m3/kg Pressure ratio 90/54=1.65 therefore V effy 0.95
(V effy is volumetric efficiency)
Therefore volumes to be swept are:
At +5° C. 0.0087269/0.9=0.0097 m3/kg
At +18° C. (0.0055647)(0.28)/0.95=0.00165 m3/kg
Therefore ratio of swept volumes=97/16.5=5.9
This is the ideal volume ratio for maximum efficiency under these conditions.
However a volumetric ratio of 5.9 to 1 is not really practicable. A ratio of 7 to 1 could be obtained from an eight cylinder compressor. Calculations show that the economiser pressure would rise to about 57 Bar A (20° C.) and the CoP would become about 3.45.
Performance
A simple single-stage, transcritical, carbon dioxide compressor system operating between +5° C. and 90 Bar A, with suction vapour superheated to +20° C., would give a CoP of 2.19.
Comparison of this figure with a 7:1 swept volume ratio PCE system shows a CoP improvement of 3.45/2.19=1.57 say 55%.
Refrigerating effect of the known simple, single stage, system having eight compression cylinders can be considered as proportional to:
8(730.58−588)=1141 kJ/kg.
Refrigerating effect of the seven main suction cylinders of an eight cylinder PCE system according to the invention can be considered as proportional to:
7(730.58−552)=1250 kJ/kg.
It can be seen that the reduction in number of cylinders connected to the evaporator is more than compensated for by the increase in refrigerating effect. Improvement in refrigerating effect=1250/1141=1.095, say 10%.
For comparison, calculations on the performance of a single stage R-134a system, operating between +5° C. and +55° C., with a compression efficiency of 0.7, indicate that the refrigerating effect per kg would be 122.1 kJ/kg; the work per kg pumped would be 42.557, giving a CoP of 2.87.
The results of the foregoing calculations can be summarised in tabular form:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0316804.4 | Jul 2003 | GB | national |
0322348.4 | Sep 2003 | GB | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4727725 | Nagata et al. | Mar 1988 | A |
5095712 | Narreau | Mar 1992 | A |
5603227 | Holden et al. | Feb 1997 | A |
5692389 | Lord et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5694784 | Frey et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5816055 | Ohman | Oct 1998 | A |
6047556 | Lifson | Apr 2000 | A |
6058729 | Lifson et al. | May 2000 | A |
6138467 | Lifson et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6202438 | Barito | Mar 2001 | B1 |
6321564 | Yamanaka et al. | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6385980 | Sienel | May 2002 | B1 |
6428284 | Vaisman | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6474087 | Lifson | Nov 2002 | B1 |
6571576 | Lifson et al. | Jun 2003 | B1 |
6705094 | Alsenz | Mar 2004 | B2 |
6718781 | Freund et al. | Apr 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0180904 | Aug 1989 | EP |
0365351 | Oct 1989 | EP |
0529882 | Dec 1992 | EP |
0778451 | Jun 1997 | EP |
0921364 | Nov 1998 | EP |
2180922 | Sep 1986 | GB |
2192735 | May 1987 | GB |
2246852 | Jun 1991 | GB |
2286659 | Jun 1995 | GB |
9-170827 | Jun 1997 | JP |
1 256 391 | May 1968 | SE |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050044885 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |