Patent classifications
F25B2313/005
Two-pipe enhanced-vapor-injection outdoor unit and multi-split system
A two-pipe enhanced-vapor-injection outdoor unit and a multi-split system are provided. The two-pipe enhanced-vapor-injection outdoor unit includes: an outdoor heat exchanger and a second port; an enhanced-vapor-injection compressor, including a gas discharge port, a gas return port and an injection port; a reversing assembly, including first to fourth ends; a supercooler, including a main heat-exchange flow path and an auxiliary heat-exchange flow path communicated with each other, the main heat-exchange flow path being connected to the second port, the auxiliary heat-exchange flow path being connected to the injection port; and a throttling assembly having a first end connected to an outlet of the main heat-exchange flow path, and a second end connected to an inlet of the outdoor heat exchanger.
AIR CONDITIONER AND FLOW PATH SWITCHING VALVE
An air conditioner includes two cut-off valves connected to respective refrigerant flow paths. At least one of the two cut-off valves is configured as a flow path switching valve configured to switch a flow path so as to block the refrigerant flow paths when a refrigerant leaks in a utilization circuit.
Refrigerant charge management with subcooling control
Embodiments relate generally to subcooling control of a heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) system. An HVAC system may include a first electronic expansion valve (EEV) fluidly coupled to an indoor coil, wherein the first EEV is adjacent to the indoor coil. The HVAC system may also include a second EEV fluidly coupled to an outdoor coil, wherein the second EEV is adjacent to the outdoor coil. A system controller may be configured to control the first and second EEVs to control a flow of refrigerant to control subcooling (SC) produced by the HVAC system. The second EEV remains open during a cooling mode, and the first EEV modulates during the cooling mode. The second EEV modulates during a heating mode, and the first EEV remains open during the heating mode.
HEAT PUMP WITH DEHUMIDIFICATION
Various embodiments of a heat pump system are disclosed to provide improved and flexible heat pump operation when dehumidification of the conditioned space is required. In one embodiment, a heat pump system includes a heat pump loop comprising a refrigerant circuit that fluidly interconnects (1) a compressor; (2) a source heat exchanger; (3) a source heat exchanger bypass circuit comprising a bypass valve; (4) a space heat exchanger; (5) a reversing valve positioned on the discharge side of the compressor; (6) a reheat circuit comprising a reheat heat exchanger; (7) first and second expansion devices; and (8) first and second expansion device bypass circuits configured to allow refrigerant to bypass the first and second expansion devices, respectively, where the first and second bypass circuits include first and second check valves, respectively; and (9) a 3-way valve configured to selectively direct refrigerant flow to the first expansion device, the reheat circuit, and the second expansion device.
Air conditioner
Noise that is generated from an indoor unit is suppressed when performing two-phase transport of refrigerant by using a liquid-pressure-adjusting expansion valve in an air conditioner including an outdoor unit, a plurality of indoor units each including an indoor heat exchanger, a relay unit that switches the plurality of indoor heat exchangers so that the indoor heat exchangers individually function as an evaporator or radiator for refrigerant, and a liquid-refrigerant connection pipe and a gas-refrigerant connection pipe that connect the outdoor unit and the indoor unit via the relay unit. The relay unit includes a relay expansion valve that further decompresses the refrigerant that has been decompressed by the liquid-pressure-adjusting expansion valve.
Air conditioner and method for controlling the same
An air conditioner and a method for controlling the same are disclosed. The air conditioner implements a multistage expansion scheme by implementing serial connection between electronic expansion valves including in the R410A refrigerant-based air conditioner, and thus guarantees an optimum compression ratio in all cooling/heating load regions. Therefore, although cycle characteristics are changed by changing R410A refrigerant to R32 refrigerant, the air conditioner optimizes the cycle simply by controlling a degree of opening of electronic expansion valves, respectively. As described above, since the cycle optimization is implemented using the multistage expansion scheme in which legacy electronic expansion valves are coupled in series, the design modification is minimized without design modification of requisite constituent elements such as a heat exchanger, system implementation is facilitated, resulting in high efficiency in cost and productivity. Cooling/heating performance improvement and reliability guarantee are achieved under all load conditions, resulting in increased system efficiency.
AIR-CONDITIONING APPARATUS
An air-conditioning apparatus includes a refrigerant circuit in which an outdoor unit, at least one load-side expansion device, and at least one load-side heat exchanger are connected by pipes to allow refrigerant to circulate. The outdoor unit includes a compressor including an injection port allowing the refrigerant to flow into a suction chamber, a heat-source-side heat exchanger for heat exchange for the refrigerant, and an accumulator. The load-side heat exchanger transfers heat between a load and the refrigerant. The outdoor unit includes: an injection pipe having one end connected between the heat-source-side heat exchanger and the load-side expansion device, and the other end connected to the injection port, in the refrigerant circuit; an outdoor-side expansion device located downstream from the one end of the injection pipe in the flow of the refrigerant from the load-side expansion device to the heat-source-side heat exchanger; and an injection expansion device that adjusts the amount of the refrigerant flowing through the injection pipe. Also, a controller is provided to control the opening degrees of the outdoor-side expansion device and the injection expansion device.
Heat pump with dehumidification
Various embodiments of a heat pump system are disclosed to provide improved and flexible heat pump operation when dehumidification of the conditioned space is required. In one embodiment, a heat pump system includes a heat pump loop comprising a refrigerant circuit that fluidly interconnects (1) a compressor; (2) a source heat exchanger; (3) a source heat exchanger bypass circuit comprising a bypass valve; (4) a space heat exchanger; (5) a reversing valve positioned on the discharge side of the compressor; (6) a reheat circuit comprising a reheat heat exchanger; (7) first and second expansion devices; and (8) first and second expansion device bypass circuits configured to allow refrigerant to bypass the first and second expansion devices, respectively, where the first and second bypass circuits include first and second check valves, respectively; and (9) a 3-way valve configured to selectively direct refrigerant flow to the first expansion device, the reheat circuit, and the second expansion device.
Pressure spike prevention in heat pump systems
A pressure spike prevention assembly for use in a heat pump system includes a thermostatic expansion valve that includes a first port and a second port. The first port is designed to be fluidly coupled to an indoor coil, and the second port is designed to be coupled to an outdoor coil. The pressure spike prevention assembly further includes a multi-way valve that includes an inlet port, an output port, and a liquid line port. The inlet port is fluidly coupled to the first port. The output port is fluidly in communication with the second port. The liquid line port is configured to be fluidly coupled to a charge compensator of the heat pump system via a liquid line of the heat pump system.
Refrigerant Charge Management with Subcooling Control
Embodiments relate generally to subcooling control of a heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) system. An HVAC system may include a first electronic expansion valve (EEV) fluidly coupled to an indoor coil, wherein the first EEV is adjacent to the indoor coil. The HVAC system may also include a second EEV fluidly coupled to an outdoor coil, wherein the second EEV is adjacent to the outdoor coil. A system controller may be configured to control the first and second EEVs to control a flow of refrigerant to control subcooling (SC) produced by the HVAC system. The second EEV remains open during a cooling mode, and the first EEV modulates during the cooling mode. The second EEV modulates during a heating mode, and the first EEV remains open during the heating mode.