Air-conditioning systems and heat pumps are used in residential, commercial, and transportation settings, to cool air or heat air, and remove humidity. Air-conditioning systems and heat pumps often use a refrigeration cycle, which includes a compressor, a condenser (or condenser coil), a metering device (or expansion device), and an evaporator (or evaporator coil), connected as a sealed loop in the order listed to allow circulation of a refrigerant. The refrigeration cycle moves heat from a cooler region to a warmer region. Heat enters the cycle in the evaporator and leaves the cycle through the condenser. In cooling mode (for an air-conditioning system), the movement of heat into the evaporator is used, whereas in heating mode (for a heat pump) the movement of heat from the condenser is used. Common refrigerants include chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs, largely banned) like R-11, R-12, R-13, R-113, R-114, and R-115, hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs, being phased out) like R-22, R-123, R-124, and R-142b, hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) like R-32, R-125, R-134a, R-143a, R-152a, and R410a (a 50/50 blend of R-32 and R-125), hydrofluoroolefins (HFOs), and hydrocarbons (HCs). Metering devices are located between the condenser and the evaporator, between the low-pressure side (or low side or suction side) and the high-pressure side (or high side or discharge side). Types of metering devices include capillary tube, fixed orifice, thermostatic expansion valve (TXV), and electronic expansion valve (EEV). Air-conditioning systems are designed to operate with a refrigerant charge level within a prescribed range, where the refrigerant charge level is the amount (or mass) of refrigerant contained within the system. The refrigerant charge level may fall outside the prescribed range for a number of reasons. The system may leak refrigerant due to a manufacturing defect or improper installation by a technician. A technician may overfill or underfill the system. If the refrigerant charge level drops below that range, the air-conditioning or heat pump system may have reduced cooling or heating capacity, reduced efficiency, poor humidity control, and reduced compressor life expectancy. In addition, when refrigerant is leaking to the atmosphere, the refrigerant causes environmental damage. If the refrigerant charge level exceeds the range (overcharging), the compressor may be damaged. Further, the capacity and the efficiency of the system may be reduced. Methods and systems exist for a technician to measure the refrigerant charge level. Normally two independent measured variables (for example, temperature and pressure) are needed to fix the state of the refrigerant, so that all other variables can be known. Pressure measurements are invasive by nature, requiring the sealed air-conditioning system to be breached with the inherent potential for loss of refrigerant. Lost refrigerant may produce an unsafe operating condition of the air-conditioning system, may incur an added expense for the servicer and/or owner of the system, and may have undesirable, deleterious effects on the environment. Further, making a pressure measurement requires the presence of a technician with its associated time delays and costs. Finally, the methods used by technicians do not quantify the amount of charge that is contained within the system; rather, they simply tell whether the refrigerant charge level is too high or too low. There exists a need to determine the superheat of the refrigeration cycle without needing to gain access to the interior of a residence or other area whose climate is being controlled and without breaching the sealed air-conditioning system as required for a pressure measurement.
One or more embodiments of the present disclosure provide a method for determining superheat for an air-conditioning system or a heat pump system using a virtual superheat measurement (VSM) system. The method comprising: providing a refrigerant; providing a compressor, having a compressor efficiency, configured to receive the refrigerant through a compressor inlet, to compress the refrigerant, and to discharge the refrigerant from a compressor outlet; providing a condenser operatively coupled to the compressor outlet via a discharge line; providing an evaporator operatively coupled to the condenser via a liquid line that contains a throttling device and to the compressor inlet via a suction line, where the refrigerant is capable of flowing in a closed loop from the compressor to the condenser to the evaporator and back to compressor; providing at least one temperature sensor configured to measure a suction temperature, a discharge temperature, and a condensing temperature in a cooling mode; and a suction temperature, discharge temperature, and evaporating temperature in a heating mode; providing storage configured to store data including the measured temperatures and instructions for a processor to perform a method for calculating the superheat; providing the processor that performs the method, the processor configured to receive the measured suction, discharge, and saturated temperatures, to calculate the superheat or subcooling, and to output the calculated superheat or subcooling to an output device; providing the output device.
The method in the cooling mode further includes: obtaining the compressor efficiency; acquiring concurrent noninvasive measurements of a suction temperature, a discharge temperature, and a condensing temperature; determining a discharge pressure as a saturated pressure corresponding to the condensing temperature; determining a first discharge enthalpy and a discharge entropy, each as functions of the discharge temperature and the calculated discharge pressure; looping through the following steps for all possible values of suction pressure:
where the method does not acquire a concurrent measurement of a refrigerant pressure made with a pressure sensor, the method does not include concurrent measurements on the evaporator, and the concurrent measurements are noninvasive.
The method in the heating mode further comprising: obtaining the compressor efficiency; acquiring concurrent noninvasive measurements of a suction temperature, a discharge temperature, and an evaporating temperature; determining an evaporating pressure as a saturated pressure corresponding to the evaporating temperature; determining a first suction enthalpy and a suction entropy, each as functions of the suction temperature and the calculated suction pressure; looping through the following steps for all possible values of discharge pressure:
One or more embodiments disclose a virtual superheat measurement (VSM) system for predicting a refrigerant charge level of an air-conditioning system, the air-conditioning system comprising: a refrigerant; a compressor, having a compressor efficiency, configured to receive the refrigerant through a compressor inlet, to compress the refrigerant, and to discharge the refrigerant from a compressor outlet; a condenser operatively coupled to the compressor outlet via a discharge line; and an evaporator operatively coupled to the condenser via a liquid line and to the compressor inlet via a suction line, wherein the refrigerant is capable of flowing in a closed loop from the compressor to the condenser to the evaporator and back to compressor.
The VSM system includes: at least one temperature sensor configured to measure a suction temperature, a discharge temperature, and a condensing temperature; storage configured to store data including the measured temperatures and instructions for a processor to perform a method for calculating the refrigerant charge level; the processor that performs the method, the processor configured to receive the measured suction, discharge, and condensing temperatures, to calculate the refrigerant charge level, and to output to an output device at least one of the refrigerant charge level and a status indicator for the refrigerant charge level; and the output device, wherein the method for calculating the refrigerant charge level comprises:
One or more embodiments disclose a method for predicting a refrigerant charge level of an air-conditioning or heat pump system. The method comprising: providing the refrigerant; providing a compressor, having a compressor efficiency, configured to receive the refrigerant through a compressor inlet, to compress the refrigerant, and to discharge the refrigerant from a compressor outlet; providing a condenser operatively coupled to the compressor outlet via a discharge line; and providing an evaporator operatively coupled to the condenser via a liquid line and to the compressor inlet via a suction line, wherein the refrigerant is capable of flowing in a closed loop from the compressor to the condenser to the evaporator and back to compressor; obtaining the compressor efficiency; acquiring rated values of the refrigerant charge level, a subcooling temperature, a superheat temperature, and a ratio of high-side charge to the total refrigerant charge at the rated charge level and rated operating conditions; acquiring concurrent noninvasive measurements of a suction temperature, a discharge temperature, and a condensing temperature; calculating the refrigerant charge level using the predetermined compressor efficiency or values used to derive the predetermined compressor efficiency, the acquired rated values, and the acquired concurrent measurements; and outputting at least one of the refrigerant charge level and a status indicator for the refrigerant charge level. The method does not acquire a concurrent measurement of a refrigerant pressure made with a pressure sensor and does not include concurrent measurements on the evaporator. The concurrent measurements are noninvasive.
While the present disclosure may refer to air-conditioning systems, it is to be understood that heat pumps are included unless explicitly excluded.
The present disclosure provides a low-cost and non-invasive means to evaluate the level of refrigerant charge using previously existing methods that estimate refrigerant charge level based upon superheat and subcooling measurements.
The virtual superheat measurement (VSM) sensor is a way to predict refrigerant superheat without using a pressure measurement, at a location in the refrigeration cycle that is difficult to measure using temperature sensors alone. For example, the VSM may be implemented without access to components located indoors, where access may be limited. In one or more embodiments of the present disclosure, the measurement may be accomplished using low-cost temperature measurements. The VSM allows an air-conditioning system's performance to be characterized by making only non-invasive measurements from only the outdoor part of a split system. A split air-conditioning system is one which consists of an outdoor portion of the system, including the condenser and the compressor, and an indoor portion that includes the evaporator. Outdoor, outdoors, or exterior is understood to be an area where such conditions as temperature and relative humidity (or dew point) are not controlled. Indoor, indoors, or interior is understood to be an area where one or more of these conditions may be controlled or where a system such as an air-conditioning system is configured to control one or more of these conditions.
Using the VSM approach, one may use temperature measurements from the condenser of an air conditioner, temperature measurements from the suction (that is, inlet) and discharge (that is, outlet) of the compressor, and an assumption about the compressor efficiency, to know that the evaporator pressure is, hence the amount of suction superheat in the system. By determining the suction superheat and the liquid line subcooling amount, the refrigerant charge level in the air conditioner or heat pump can be compared to the correct amount.
The VSM can be used, for example, as part of a method to determine whether an air conditioner or heat pump has too little or too much refrigerant.
The VSM can be used, for example, as a means to control an expansion valve to ensure that a desired amount of superheat is achieved under a variety of operating conditions.
An advantage of VSM approach is that the approach uses no pressure measurements, which are expensive and bring a risk of refrigerant leakage. A second advantage is that all of the measurements can be made on the outdoor part of a split-system air conditioner.
In one or more embodiments of the present disclosure, a suction temperature may be measured on the suction line 286. In particular, the suction temperature Tsuc may be measured on an exterior portion of the suction line 286. More particularly, the suction temperature may be measured at the compressor inlet 222. Further, a discharge temperature Tdis may be measured on the discharge line 226. In particular, the discharge temperature may be measured at the compressor outlet 224. Further still, a condensing temperature Tcond may be measured at the condenser 210. No other concurrent measurements, temperature or otherwise, are needed to determine the refrigerant charge level of the air-conditioning system 200. Thus, the required measurements may be made noninvasively from outdoors, without needing to go indoors, for example into a residence, which would require an occupant of the residence to be available. In addition, the temperature measurements may be made on the outer surfaces of the lines that carry the refrigerant, and so are noninvasive of the air-conditioning system 200. The noninvasive nature of the disclosed methods, systems, and apparatuses is in contrast to approaches which require pressure measurements, which are invasive of the air-conditioning system, and measurements at the evaporator, which are invasive of the residence.
One or more embodiments of the present disclosure provides a virtual superheat measurement (VSM) method for determining the superheat of an air-conditioning system. The superheat may be used in a calculation to determine a refrigerant charge level of an air-conditioning system. The method may be used to solve for mtotal in Equation 1:
and mtotal and mtotal,rated are actual and rated total refrigerant charge, TSC and TSC,rated are actual and rated subcooling, and TSH and TSH,rated are actual and rated superheat. kSC and kSH are empirical constants that depend on the condenser and evaporator geometries, and relate the refrigerant charge level in the high and low sides of the system to subcooling and superheat, respectively. The ratio kSH/kSC is defined as:
kch is a constant that may be determined through laboratory testing. The parameter α0 is the ratio of refrigerant charge at which there exists saturated liquid at the exit of the condenser coil at the rating condition to the rated refrigerant charge. Xhs,rated is the ratio of high-side charge to the total refrigerant charge at the rated charge level and rated operating conditions. A typical value for Xhs,rated is 0.73, and a value of 0.75 is appropriate for α0. These values can be used in place of laboratory testing with minor loss of accuracy.
Consequently, the refrigerant charge level of the air-conditioning system may be estimated through measuring TSC, TSH, and knowing these values for the rated condition. Rated conditions may be provided by the manufacturer of the air-conditioning system. When they are not, default values may be used. The rated condition refers to a particular operating condition (typically 95 degrees Fahrenheit (° F., 35 degrees Celsius (° C.)) outdoors and 80° F. (27° C.), 50% relative humidity indoors). The rating is defined by a test standard, Air-Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration Institute (AHRI) 210/240 or the federal government's equivalent, and results in a rated capacity, in British thermal units per hour (Btu/hr). The manufacturer may select the correct amount of charge—and resulting TSC and TSH, to get the rating result they desire. To find TSH, knowing Psuc is required, but direct measurement of the pressure is invasive, and a direct pressure measurement can be itself a source of refrigerant charge leakage. This concern is particularly important when monitoring refrigerant charge over time because even a short-term release of refrigerant could be a problem. One or more embodiments of the method first estimates Psuc, and subsequently TSH without using a pressure sensor and accessing only the outdoor part of the air-conditioning system, and therefore, being very noninvasive. The method is based upon the assumption that isentropic efficiency of the compressor remains constant. In this method a one-time measurement of Tdis, Kcond, Tsuc, TLL, and Psuc are used to calculate enthalpy at the inlet and outlet of the compressor, to determine the compressor efficiency, η. (If a manufacturer provides this one-time measurement is not necessary). After that, one can solve for the suction enthalpy to calculate Psuc, hence TSH, hence apply Equations 1 to 3.
Referring to
At the time for which superheat, refrigerant charge level, or other related quantities are desired, temperature measurements are obtained for a discharge temperature, a suction temperature and a condensing temperature S320. These temperatures may be obtained non-invasively, for example, by placing temperature sensors on the outside surfaces of the refrigerant lines in the air-conditioning system. The discharge temperature and the suction temperature may be made at the compressor outlet 224 and compressor inlet 222, respectively. In some cases, because of the temperature of the compressor, the suction temperature may be measured along the suction line away from the compressor 220. Similarly, the discharge temperature may be made on the discharge line 226 away from the compressor 220.
In step S330, a discharge pressure may be determined as a saturated pressure corresponding to the condensing temperature. The saturated pressure is the pressure at which the refrigerant has a two-phase state (that is, a mixture of liquid and vapor). In this two-phase state, the pressure and the temperature are dependent. Thus, by having either the pressure or the temperature, the second can be found by thermodynamic data. For example, if refrigerant R134a is saturated at 20° C., then the pressure must be 572 kilopascals (kPa).
In Step S340, a first specific discharge enthalpy, hats, and a specific discharge entropy, sdis, may be determined, each a function of the discharge temperature, Tdis, and the discharge pressure, Pdis.
In step S380, steps S350-S370 may be performed iteratively until all possible values of suction pressure have been used in the steps as follows:
In step S350, a value of the suction pressure is guessed, where a tilde represents values based on the loop of steps and the guessed value of suction pressure. At the suction temperature, all values of suction pressure between two limits are tried. One limit is the saturation line. The second limit is the suction pressure that corresponds to the calculated discharge entropy.
In step S360, a suction enthalpy and a suction entropy are each determined as functions of the guessed suction pressure and the suction temperature. Also, a second discharge enthalpy is determined as a function of the discharge pressure and the guessed suction enthalpy.
In step S370, a second compressor efficiency is calculated as the difference between the second discharge enthalpy and the suction enthalpy divided by the difference between the first discharge enthalpy and the suction enthalpy.
In step S385, the suction pressure determined during the loop S380 that corresponds to the value of the second compressor efficiency nearest to the compressor efficiency is selected as the estimated suction pressure.
In step S390, the estimated superheat is calculated based on the estimated suction pressure and the suction temperature.
For a heat pump in heating mode, the method can be used to determine subcooling using measurements from the same sensors. In this case, the indoor coil and outdoor coil reverse their roles, and discharge pressure becomes the unknown variable, so that the method is as follows:
Psuc can be calculated based on Tevap from measurements on the outdoor coil
hsuc and ssuc are calculated based on Tsuc and Psuc
The value of is guessed, and is calculated based on the guessed value is calculated based on ssuc and
is found by using
The calculations are repeated for all values of possible pressure for Pdis
The final estimated value for Pdis is the one corresponding to the closest value of to ηII
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The following examples further illustrate the one or more embodiments of the present disclosure but, of course, should not be construed as in any way limiting its scope.
The systems, apparatuses, and methods disclosed herein are applicable for determining superheat and/or predicting a refrigerant charge level of an air-conditioning system, a heat pump, or any apparatus operating on similar principles and are not limited to split air-conditioning systems.
All references, including publications, patent applications, and patents, cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each reference were individually and specifically indicated to be incorporated by reference and were set forth in its entirety herein.
The use of the terms “a” and “an” and “the” and “at least one” and similar referents in the context of describing the invention (especially in the context of the following claims) are to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural, unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The use of the term “at least one” followed by a list of one or more items (for example, “at least one of A and B”) is to be construed to mean one item selected from the listed items (A or B) or any combination of two or more of the listed items (A and B), unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The terms “comprising,” “having,” “including,” and “containing” are to be construed as open-ended terms (i.e., meaning “including, but not limited to,”) unless otherwise noted. Recitation of ranges of values herein are merely intended to serve as a shorthand method of referring individually to each separate value falling within the range, unless otherwise indicated herein, and each separate value is incorporated into the specification as if it were individually recited herein. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context. The use of any and all examples, or exemplary language (e.g., “such as”) provided herein, is intended merely to better illuminate the invention and does not pose a limitation on the scope of the invention unless otherwise claimed. No language in the specification should be construed as indicating any non-claimed element as essential to the practice of the invention.
Preferred embodiments of this invention are described herein, including the best mode known to the inventors for carrying out the invention. Variations of those preferred embodiments may become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon reading the foregoing description. The inventors expect skilled artisans to employ such variations as appropriate, and the inventors intend for the invention to be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein. Accordingly, this invention includes all modifications and equivalents of the subject matter recited in the claims appended hereto as permitted by applicable law. Moreover, any combination of the above-described elements in all possible variations thereof is encompassed by the invention unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context.
This patent application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/355,447, filed Jun. 24, 2022, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety and for all purposes.
This invention was made with Government support under Grant Number DE-EE0008689 awarded by the United States Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in this invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63355447 | Jun 2022 | US |