COOLING SYSTEM
20210372678 · 2021-12-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
F25B9/006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B41/39
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B9/008
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B49/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2700/195
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2309/061
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2700/197
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2600/2515
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B41/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2700/21163
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2700/21175
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2400/23
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F25B49/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B41/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B41/39
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The present invention provides a cooling system (1), comprising a receiver tank (2), an evaporator (3), a compressor (4) and a gas cooler (5), wherein the receiver tank (2) comprises a fluid inlet (6), a liquid outlet (7) and a gas outlet (8); the evaporator (3) comprises an evaporator inlet (9) and an evaporator outlet (10), the compressor (4) comprises a compressor inlet (11) and a compressor outlet (12); the gas cooler (5) comprises a cooler inlet (13) and a cooler outlet (14); and the liquid outlet (7) of the receiver tank (2) is connected to the evaporator inlet (9) via a first conduit (15), the evaporator outlet (10) is connected to the compressor inlet (11) via a second conduit (16), the compressor outlet (12) is connected to the cooler inlet (13) via a third conduit (17), and the cooler outlet (14) is connected to the fluid inlet (6) of the receiver via a fourth conduit (18), wherein at least one of the first conduit (15) and the fourth conduit (18) comprises a pressure regulator (19,25), and the gas outlet (8) of the receiver tank is connected to the evaporator inlet (9) via a fifth conduit (20) and a gas flow regulator (21,22), such that a flow of liquid refrigerant in the first conduit (15) may be controlled by operating the gas flow regulator (21,22) during use.
Claims
1. A cooling system, comprising a receiver tank, an evaporator, a compressor and a gas cooler, wherein the receiver tank comprises a fluid inlet, a liquid outlet and a gas outlet; the evaporator comprises an evaporator inlet and an evaporator outlet, the compressor comprises a compressor inlet and a compressor outlet; the gas cooler comprises a cooler inlet and a cooler outlet; and the liquid outlet of the receiver tank is connected to the evaporator inlet via a first conduit, the evaporator outlet is connected to the compressor inlet via a second conduit, the compressor outlet is connected to the cooler inlet via a third conduit, and the cooler outlet is connected to the fluid inlet of the receiver via a fourth conduit, wherein at least one of the first conduit and the fourth conduit comprises a pressure regulator, and the gas outlet of the receiver tank is connected to the evaporator inlet via a fifth conduit and a gas flow regulator, such that a flow of liquid refrigerant in the first conduit may be controlled by operating the gas flow regulator during use.
2. A cooling system according to claim 1, wherein the gas flow regulator is arranged such that a lowering of a flow of gaseous refrigerant in the fifth conduit by operating the gas flow regulator will increase the flow of liquid refrigerant in the first conduit.
3. A cooling system according to claim 1, wherein the gas outlet of the receiver tank is connected to the evaporator inlet via the fifth conduit and the gas flow regulator, such that a mixture of gaseous refrigerant from the fifth conduit and liquid refrigerant from the first conduit may enter the evaporator inlet during use.
4. A cooling system according to claim 1, wherein the fifth conduit comprises a first end connected to the gas outlet of the receiver and a second end connected to the first conduit, such that gaseous refrigerant from the gas outlet of the receiver may be mixed with a liquid refrigerant from the liquid outlet of the receiver before entering the evaporator inlet during use.
5. A cooling system according to claim 1, wherein the first conduit and the fifth conduit is connected to the evaporator inlet via a sixth conduit.
6. A cooling system according to claim 1, wherein the gas flow regulator is a two-way valve.
7. A cooling system according to claim 1, wherein the first conduit, the fifth conduit and the evaporator inlet is interconnected by a three-way coupling featuring a first inlet connected to the fifth conduit, a second inlet connected to the first conduit and an outlet connected to the evaporator inlet, wherein the second inlet is arranged at an angle relative to the outlet, such that an ejector effect of a gaseous refrigerant flow from the fifth conduit acting on a liquid refrigerant in the first conduit is minimized during use.
8. A cooling system according to claim 9, wherein the angle is about 90°.
9. A cooling system according to claim 1, wherein the gas flow regulator is a three-way valve.
10. A cooling system according to claim 9, wherein the three-way valve comprises a first inlet connected to the first conduit, a second inlet connected to the fifth conduit and an outlet connected to the evaporator inlet.
11. A cooling system according to claim 1, comprising a first pressure sensor and a first temperature sensor, arranged in the second conduit, and a second pressure sensor and a second temperature sensor, or a pressure transmitter, arranged in the fourth conduit upstream a pressure regulator.
12. A method of controlling a cooling system, wherein the cooling system comprises comprising a receiver tank, an evaporator, a compressor and a gas cooler, wherein the receiver tank comprises a fluid inlet, a liquid outlet and a gas outlet; the evaporator comprises an evaporator inlet and an evaporator outlet, the compressor comprises a compressor inlet and a compressor outlet; the gas cooler comprises a cooler inlet and a cooler outlet; and the liquid outlet of the receiver tank is connected to the evaporator inlet via a first conduit, the evaporator outlet is connected to the compressor inlet via a second conduit, the compressor outlet is connected to the cooler inlet via a third conduit, and the cooler outlet is connected to the fluid inlet of the receiver via a fourth conduit, wherein at least one of the first conduit and the fourth conduit comprises a pressure regulator, and the gas outlet of the receiver is connected to the evaporator inlet via a fifth conduit and a gas flow regulator, and the method comprising the step of: increasing a flow of gaseous refrigerant in the fifth conduit by controlling the gas flow regulator to obtain a reduced flow of liquid refrigerant in the first conduit and a reduced cooling capacity in the evaporator; or reducing a flow of gaseous refrigerant in the fifth conduit by controlling the gas flow regulator to obtain an increased flow of liquid refrigerant in the first conduit and an increased cooling capacity in the evaporator.
13. A method according to claim 12, wherein the fourth conduit comprises a pressure regulator and the step of increasing the flow of gaseous refrigerant comprises controlling the pressure regulator to decrease the pressure fall between the cooler outlet and the fluid inlet of the receiver tank.
14. A method according to claim 12, wherein the first conduit comprises a pressure regulator and the step of increasing the flow of gaseous refrigerant comprises controlling the pressure regulator to increase the pressure fall over the first conduit.
15. A method according to claim 12, comprising an initial step of: measuring the refrigerant temperature in the second conduit to obtain a differential temperature curve relative to the boiling temperature of the liquid refrigerant within the evaporator; and increasing or reducing a flow of gaseous refrigerant in the fifth conduit depending on whether the differential temperature curve shows a falling or rising differential temperature, respectively.
Description
SHORT DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0058] The present invention is described in detail below by way of example only and with reference to the following drawings:
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[0060]
[0061]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0064] The present invention provides a highly advantageous DX cooling system, wherein the cooling capacity of an evaporator may be regulated/controlled in an improved manner. A particularly preferred refrigerant for use in the inventive cooling system is CO.sub.2. Corresponding or similar features of the cooling systems shown in
[0065] A first exemplary cooling system according to the invention is shown in
[0066] The liquid outlet 7 of the receiver tank 2 is connected to the evaporator inlet 9 via a first conduit 15, the evaporator outlet 10 is connected to the compressor inlet 11 via a second conduit 16, the compressor outlet 12 is connected to the cooler inlet 13 via a third conduit 17, and the cooler outlet 14 is connected to the fluid inlet 6 of the receiver tank via a fourth conduit 18 and a pressure regulator 19.
[0067] When the cooling system is a transcritical system, a refrigerant of the cooling system will be at transcritical conditions between the compressor outlet 12 and the pressure regulator 19. The pressure regulator 19 is a modulating control valve arranged to lower the pressure of the transcritical refrigerant flow exiting the gas cooler 5. In this manner, the refrigerant will obtain subcritical conditions and separate into a gas and a liquid phase in the receiver tank 2. The cooling system may also be operated under subcritical conditions throughout the cooling system. The function of the pressure regulator 19 is to optimize the heat removal in the gas cooler in relation to the remaining parts of the cooling system by regulating the high-pressure in the gas cooler. Further, the pressure regulator 19 ensures that the refrigerant in the receiver tank 2 is subcritical. The receiver tank functions as a refrigerant buffer, which is a requirement since the amount of refrigerant in the gas cooler 5 and the evaporator 3 will vary.
[0068] The gas outlet 8 of the receiver tank is connected to the evaporator inlet 9 via a fifth conduit 20 and a two-way gas valve 21 (i.e. a gas flow regulator). In this manner, the pressure in the receiver tank 2, and consequently the flow of liquid refrigerant in the first conduit 15, may be controlled/regulated by operating the two-way gas valve 21.
[0069] A significant advantage of using the two-way gas valve 21 to control the flow of liquid refrigerant to the evaporator 2, optionally in combination with controlling the pressure regulator 19, is that the cooling system may operate at a higher evaporation temperature and pressure than in the prior art. In this manner, the suction pressure, i.e. the pressure on the suction side of the compressor, is upheld, and the high-pressure side, i.e. the section of the cooling system between the compressor outlet and the pressure regulator 19, may have a lower pressure.
[0070] In addition to providing an improved control of the refrigerant flow, the inventive cooling system also ensures an optimal energy efficiency since the refrigerant gas in the receiver tank 2 is utilized as refrigerant in the evaporator 3. The gaseous refrigerant provides a minor additional cooling effect, about 2-5%, which is not possible to obtain in the prior art cooling systems.
[0071] The turbulence caused by combining the liquid and the gaseous refrigerant prior to entering the evaporator 3 provides an optimal distribution of the refrigerant in the evaporator and an optimal utilization of the heat transfer area of the evaporator 3. In particular at lower cooling capacities, i.e. low flow of liquid refrigerant to the evaporator 3, the turbulence provides a significant advantage compared to the prior art systems. In the prior art systems, the lower cooling capacity commonly leads to an uneven distribution of the liquid refrigerant, which in turn lowers the evaporation temperature and pressure. The lowered evaporation temperature may be problematic as it may cause temperatures at an external side of the evaporator being too low for its intended use, e.g. goods to be cooled may freeze.
[0072] To minimize any ejector-effect the gas flow in the fifth conduit 20 may have on the liquid refrigerant in the first conduit 15, the fifth and first conduit are connected at an angle α of about 90°. The combined refrigerant flow is connected to the evaporator 3 via a common conduit 23 (i.e. a sixth conduit). To further optimize the cooling system, the fifth and first conduit 20,15 are connected to a mixing chamber 26 to obtain an optimum mixing of the gaseous and liquid refrigerant before entering the evaporator. In the present embodiment, the mixing chamber 26 is a three-way pipe connection having a cross-sectional area larger than a cross-sectional area of the first conduit 15. The differences in the cross-sectional areas provides a slight pressure drop of the liquid refrigerant to ensure optimum evaporation conditions in the evaporator. In embodiments not featuring a mixing chamber, the slight pressure drop may be obtained by ensuring that the cross-sectional area of the common conduit is larger than the cross-sectional area of the first conduit. It is noted that it is not essential to have a dedicated arrangement or device to obtain the slight pressure drop in the refrigerant before it enters the evaporator. Depending on the operating conditions, the slight pressure drop caused by the flow resistance in the first and/or common conduit may be sufficient.
[0073] In view of the prior art, the cooling system according to the invention is also more cost-efficient in that an expansion valve arranged between the liquid outlet 7 and the evaporator 3 is not required. Expansion valves are expensive and constitutes a significant percentage of the total system cost.
[0074] The condition of the refrigerant in the cooling system is monitored by a pressure sensor 27a and a temperature sensor 28a arranged close to the evaporator outlet 10, and a pressure sensor 27b and a temperature sensor 28b arranged between the cooler outlet 14 and the pressure regulator 19.
[0075] The cooling system may feature a control system which, depending on the input from the pressure sensors 27a,b, the temperature sensors 28a,b and any optional external temperature data, may control the pressure regulator 19 and the gas valve 21.
[0076] The cooling system may be controlled by measuring the refrigerant temperature in the second conduit 16 to obtain a differential temperature curve relative to the boiling temperature of the liquid refrigerant within the evaporator 3. Depending on whether the differential temperature curve shows a falling or rising differential temperature, the flow of gaseous refrigerant in the fifth conduit 15 may be increased or reduced, and the flow of liquid refrigerant respectively reduced or increased, by regulating the two-way gas valve and/or the pressure regulator 19. In prior art DX cooling systems, the flow of liquid refrigerant is also increased when the differential temperature curve increases (i.e. shows an increased overheating of the refrigerant) and decreased when the differential temperature curve decreases, but a flow of gaseous refrigerant entering the evaporator may not be controlled.
[0077] The evaporator 3 may be used to cool any suitable external medium, such as air or a liquid. Similarly, any suitable external medium may be used to obtain the required cooling effect in the gas cooler 5.
[0078] The operating conditions may vary within a large temperature and pressure range dependent on the type of refrigerant. Suitable operating conditions will be apparent to the skilled person based on the present disclosure.
[0079] A second exemplary cooling system according to the invention is shown in
[0080] A third exemplary cooling system according to the invention is shown in
[0081] A fourth exemplary cooling system according to the invention is shown in