Air-conditioning apparatus
11226149 · 2022-01-18
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24F11/42
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F1/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B47/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B47/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D21/006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
The air-conditioning apparatus has a refrigeration cycle for circulating refrigerant by connecting a compressor, a four-way valve, an outdoor heat exchanger, an expansion valve, and an indoor heat exchanger in this order with refrigerant pipes. The outdoor heat exchanger includes a plurality of heat transfer fins, a heat transfer tube having a plurality of paths, a distributor configured to branch, at an intermediate portion of the heat transfer fin, a refrigerant flow path into an upper path and a lower path of the heat transfer tube, a first temperature detecting unit configured to detect a refrigerant temperature merged through the distributor, a second temperature detecting unit configured to detect a refrigerant temperature of a refrigerant passing through the lower path, and a controller for performing control for terminating the defrosting operation when the refrigerant temperature detected by the first temperature detecting unit reaches the first target temperature and the refrigerant temperature detected by the second temperature detecting unit reaches the second target temperature during the defrosting operation.
Claims
1. An air-conditioning apparatus including a refrigeration cycle in which a compressor, a four-way valve, an outdoor heat exchanger, an expansion valve, and an indoor heat exchanger are connected in order by refrigerant pipes to circulate refrigerant, wherein the outdoor heat exchanger includes a plurality of heat transfer fins arranged in parallel at intervals, a heat transfer tube connected with and penetrating through the plurality of heat transfer fins and having a plurality of paths in the vertical direction of the plurality of heat transfer fins, a distributor configured to branch, at a vertically intermediate portion of the plurality of heat transfer fins, a refrigerant flow path of the heat transfer tube into a vertically upper path and a vertically lower path, a first temperature detector configured to detect a temperature of merged refrigerant into which refrigerant flowing through the vertically upper path and refrigerant flowing through the vertically lower path merge through the distributer, a second temperature detector configured to detect a refrigerant temperature of the refrigerant passing through the vertically lower path, and a controller configured to perform control to terminate defrosting operation when the refrigerant temperature detected by the first temperature detector reaches a first target temperature and the refrigerant temperature detected by the second temperature detector reaches a second target temperature during the defrosting operation.
2. The air-conditioning apparatus of claim 1, wherein the second temperature detector detects the refrigerant temperature in a vertically upper portion of the vertically lower path.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1)
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(4)
(5)
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(9)
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(10) An Embodiment of the present disclosure will be described below with reference to the drawings. In the drawings, the same or equivalent referents are denoted by the same reference numerals, and the description thereof is omitted or simplified as appropriate. The shape, size, arrangement, and the like of the configurations shown in the drawings can be appropriately changed within the scope of the present disclosure.
Embodiment
(11) First, the overall configuration of the air-conditioning apparatus according to the present embodiment will be described with reference to
(12) The air-conditioning apparatus according to the present embodiment includes an outdoor unit 100 installed outdoors as shown in
(13) As shown in
(14) The interior of the casing 10 is partitioned into a fan chamber 13 and a machinery chamber 14 by a partition plate 12. The fan chamber 13 accommodates an outdoor heat exchanger 3 provided to face the left side surface to the entire rear surface of the outdoor unit 100, a mounting plate 15 provided to extend along the vertical direction of the outdoor heat exchanger 3, and a fan 16 mounted on the mounting plate 15. The machinery chamber 14 accommodates a compressor 1 provided on the upper surface of a bottom plate 10e and a controller 6 provided above the compressor 1. The controller 6 is composed of hardware such as a circuit device or software executed on a computing device such as a microcomputer or a CPU, and controls the outdoor unit 100. The refrigerant delivered from the indoor unit is compressed in the compressor 1 and sent to the outdoor heat exchanger 3 through the refrigerant pipe.
(15) The compressor 1 is for suctioning and compressing of refrigerant and discharging it at a high temperature and a high pressure. The compressor 1 is composed of, for example, a capacitance-controllable inverter compressor or the like. The four-way valve 2 has a function of switching the flow path of the refrigerant. In the heating operation, the four-way valve 2 allows refrigerant communication between the discharge side of the compressor 1 and the indoor heat exchanger 5, and switches the refrigerant flow path so as to allow refrigerant communication between the suction side of the compressor 1 and the outdoor heat exchanger 3, as indicated by the broken line in
(16) The outdoor heat exchanger 3 functions as a condenser during the cooling operation, and exchanges heat between refrigerant discharged from the compressor 1 and air. The outdoor heat exchanger 3 functions as an evaporator during the heating operation, and exchanges heat between the refrigerant flowing out of the expansion valve 4 and the air. One side of the outdoor heat exchanger 3 is connected to the four-way valve 2, and the other side of the outdoor heat exchanger 3 is connected to the expansion valve 4.
(17) The expansion valve 4 is a valve for reducing the pressure of the refrigerant passing through the evaporator, and is composed of, for example, an electronic expansion valve capable of adjusting the opening degree.
(18) The indoor heat exchanger 5 is housed in the indoor unit together with the fan 17. The indoor heat exchanger 5 functions as an evaporator during the cooling operation, and exchanges heat between the refrigerant flowing out of the expansion valve 4 and the air. The indoor heat exchanger 5 functions as a condenser during the heating operation, and exchanges heat between the refrigerant discharged from the compressor 1 and the air. One side of the indoor heat exchanger 5 is connected to the four-way valve 2, and the other side of the indoor heat exchanger 5 is connected to the expansion valve 4.
(19) Next, the refrigerant flow of the refrigeration cycle 101 during the heating operation will be described with reference to
(20) In the heating operation, when the outside air temperature is low and the outside air humidity is high, moisture in the air in contact with the outdoor heat exchanger 3 reaches the dew point, condenses, frosts, and adheres to the surfaces of the heat transfer fins 30. If these frosts deposit on the surfaces of the heat transfer fins 30, heat exchange efficiencies are lowered, resulting in a reduction in heating capacity. Therefore, when the air-conditioning apparatus performs heating operation for a prolonged period, defrosting operation (cooling operation) which is the reverse of the heating operation needs to be performed periodically to remove the frost.
(21) Next, the refrigerant flow of the refrigeration cycle 101 in the defrosting operation (cooling operation) will be described with reference to
(22) Next, details of the outdoor heat exchanger 3 will be described with reference to
(23) As shown in
(24) The heat transfer tube 31 transfers the heat of the refrigerant passing through the inside of the pipe to the air passing through the outside of the pipe. As shown in
(25) The outdoor heat exchanger 3 has a distributor 32 for branching the refrigerant flow path connected to the intermediate path C located at the intermediate portion of the heat transfer fins 30 into an upper path A and a lower path B of the heat transfer tube 31. The distributor 32 is connected by a connecting pipe 32c to the heat transfer tube 31 which constitutes the intermediate path C. The first branch pipe 32a branched by the distributor 32 is connected to the lower end of the heat transfer tube 31 constituting the upper path A. The second branch pipe 32b branched by the distributor 32 is connected to the upper end of the heat transfer tube 31 constituting the lower path B.
(26) The outdoor heat exchanger 3 further includes a first temperature detecting unit 7 for detecting the refrigerant temperature at which the refrigerant flowing through the upper path A and the refrigerant flowing through the lower path B merge through the distributor 32, and a second temperature detecting unit 8 for detecting the refrigerant temperature of the refrigerant passing through the lower path B. The second temperature detecting unit 8 is provided upstream of the first temperature detecting unit 7 when viewed from the compressor 1 in the defrosting operation. The first temperature detecting unit 7 and the second temperature detecting unit 8 are composed of, for example, thermistors.
(27) The first temperature detecting unit 7 detects the refrigerant temperature of the refrigerant that has passed through the entire surface of the outdoor heat exchanger 3 during the defrosting operation. On the other hand, the second temperature detecting unit 8 detects the refrigerant temperature in the vicinity of the position where the refrigerant flowing through the upper path A and the refrigerant flowing through the lower path B merge through the distributor 32. The apparatus is configured so that in the defrosting operation, the refrigerant temperature is detected as much as possible of the refrigerant which has passed through the lower path B by the second temperature detecting unit 8 to determine whether or not frost or ice is melted.
(28) In the air-conditioning apparatus according to the present embodiment, in the heating operation, the refrigerant flowing in from the intermediate path C is branched into an upper path A and a lower path B by the distributor 32. At this time, since the gas-liquid two-phase refrigerant flowing in the upper path A flows to the upper portion of the outdoor heat exchanger 3 against the gravitational force, the flow path resistivity is large and the refrigerant flow rate is small. On the other hand, since the gas-liquid two-phase refrigerant flowing in the lower path B flows along the gravitational direction, the flow path resistance is small and the refrigerant flow rate is large. In the upper path A where the refrigerant flow rate is small, since the refrigerant easily evaporates, the temperature becomes superheated vapor in the vicinity of the outlet of the heat transfer tube 31, and the refrigerant temperature becomes high. On the other hand, in the lower path B where the refrigerant flow rate is high, the refrigerant does not evaporate completely and becomes saturated. Therefore, in the outdoor heat exchanger 3, a temperature difference may occur between the upper path A and the lower path B.
(29) The condensation water adhering to the heat transfer fins 30 slides down between the heat transfer fins 30 by its own weight, and is discharged from the lowermost portion of the heat transfer fins 30 to the outside through the bottom plate 10e. In this process, the lower end of the outdoor heat exchanger 3 holds the dew condensation water in the form of water droplets by the surface tension between the heat transfer fins 30, as shown in part D in
(30) Therefore, in the air-conditioning apparatus according to the present embodiment, the control for terminating the defrosting operation is performed based on the refrigerant temperature detected by the first temperature detecting unit 7 and the refrigerant temperature detected by the second temperature detecting unit 8. Hereinafter, the control operation of the air-conditioning apparatus according to the present embodiment will be described with reference to the flow chart shown in
(31)
(32) First, the air-conditioning apparatus starts the heating operation. In step S101, the controller 6 determines whether t<TH is satisfied in the relation between the refrigerant temperature t detected by the first temperature detecting unit 7 and the refrigerant temperature TH for starting the defrosting operation. The controller 6, when the first temperature detecting unit 7 detects the refrigerant temperature t is determined to be t<TH, proceeds to step S102, and starts the defrosting operation. On the other hand, when determining that the refrigerant temperature t detected by the first temperature detecting unit 7 does not satisfy t<TH, the controller 6 repeats the S101 of steps until t satisfies t<TH.
(33) In step S103, the controller 6 determines whether or not the refrigerant temperature t detected by the first temperature detecting unit 7 satisfies t>t1. When determining that the refrigerant temperature t detected by the first temperature detecting unit 7 satisfies t>t1, the controller 6 proceeds to S104. On the other hand, when determining that the refrigerant temperature t detected by the first temperature detecting unit 7 does not satisfy t>t1, the controller 6 repeats the S103 of steps until t satisfies t>t1.
(34) In step S104, the controller 6 determines whether or not the refrigerant temperature t detected by the second temperature detecting unit 8 satisfies t>t2. If it is determined that the refrigerant temperature t detected by the second temperature detecting unit 8 satisfies t>t2, the controller 6 proceeds to step S105, ends the defrosting operation, and returns to step S101. On the other hand, when determining that the refrigerant temperature t detected by the second temperature detecting unit 8 does not satisfy t>t2, the controller 6 repeats the S104 of steps until t satisfies t>t2.
(35) Next, time-response waveforms of the first temperature detecting unit 7 and the second temperature detecting unit 8 in the defrosting operation will be described with reference to
(36) First, the time-response waveforms of the first temperature detecting unit 7 and the second temperature detecting unit 8 when the outside air has a positive low temperature and is humid will be described with reference to
(37) When the outside air has a positive low temperature and is humid, frost adhering to the lower portion of the outdoor heat exchanger 3 may grow into ice. In the defrosting operation, a large amount of heat is consumed to melt the ice generated in the lower portion of the outdoor heat exchanger 3. Therefore, the high temperature refrigerant discharged from the compressor 1 reject much heat to the outdoor heat exchanger 3. At this time, only the frost is melted by the high temperature refrigerant in the upper path A, so that the heat dissipation of the refrigerant is small. Thus, the refrigerant temperatures of the refrigerant passing through the upper path A are relatively high. On the other hand, in the lower path B, the ice needs to be melted together with the frost by the high temperature refrigerant. Thus, the refrigerant temperatures of the refrigerant passing through the lower path B are lower than those of the refrigerant passing through the upper path A.
(38) That is, since the refrigerant temperature detected by the first temperature detecting unit 7 is such that the refrigerant flowing through the upper path A and the refrigerant flowing through the lower path B merge via the distributor 32, the temperature is pulled to the refrigerant temperature of the refrigerant flowing through the upper path A as shown by the curve X in
(39) Therefore, in the air-conditioning apparatus of the present embodiment, the defrosting operation is performed until the time T2 at which the temperature detected by the second temperature detecting unit 8 becomes t2, so that the defrosting operation is extended for a predetermined time from the time T1, and the capability of melting ice is enhanced.
(40) Next, time-response waveforms of the first temperature detecting unit 7 and the second temperature detecting unit 8 when the outside air has a very low temperature and the absolute humidity is low will be described with reference to
(41) Next, time-response waveforms of the first temperature detecting unit 7 and the second temperature detecting unit 8 when the outside air has a low temperature and is humid will be described with reference to
(42) When the outside air has a low temperature and is humid, the time response waveform X of the first temperature detecting unit 7 and the time response waveform Y of the second temperature detecting unit 8 are substantially the same as shown in
(43) As described above, according to the air-conditioning apparatus of the present embodiment, in the defrosting operation, when the refrigerant temperature detected by the first temperature detecting unit 7 reaches the first target temperature t1 and the refrigerant temperature detected by the second temperature detecting unit 8 reaches the second target temperature t2, the defrosting operation is terminated. Therefore, when ice is generated in the lower portion of the outdoor heat exchanger 3, the defrosting operation is extended until the refrigerant temperature detected by the second temperature detecting unit 8 reaches the second target temperature t2, and the capability of melting ice is enhanced. On the other hand, when ice is not generated in the lower portion of the outdoor heat exchanger 3, the defrosting operation is hardly extended because the difference between the refrigerant temperature detected by the first temperature detecting unit 7 and the refrigerant temperature detected by the second temperature detecting unit 8 is very small. Therefore, in this air-conditioning apparatus, ice can be effectively melted when ice is generated in the lower part of the outdoor heat exchanger 3, and unnecessary defrosting operation is not performed unless ice is generated in the lower part of the outdoor heat exchanger 3, so that the defrosting operation can be performed for the necessary minimum duration.
(44) The second temperature detecting unit 8 in the present embodiment detects the refrigerant temperature in the vicinity of the position where the refrigerant flowing through the upper path A and the refrigerant flowing through the lower path B merge through the distributor 32. Therefore, in the air-conditioning apparatus according to the present embodiment, since the second temperature detecting unit 8 can detect the refrigerant temperature passing through the lower path B during the defrosting operation, it is possible to reliably determine whether or not the frost or the ice is melted.
(45) It should be noted that, in air-conditioning apparatuses, when the volume of the outdoor heat exchanger is large, even if the heating operation is performed when the outside air temperature is about 5 degrees C. and the humidity is about 90% at a positive low temperature, the evaporating temperature of the refrigerant doesn't tend to become negative, and therefore, the frosting amount is very small. However, in the case of the air-conditioning apparatus, if the volume of the outdoor heat exchanger is designed to be small because the width of the heat transfer fin is short, the number of rows of the heat transfer fin is small, or the height of the heat transfer fin is low, the evaporating temperature of the refrigerant may be low during the heating operation, and the temperature may be lowered to about 0 degrees C. In the air-conditioning apparatus according to the present embodiment, even in the configuration having such an outdoor heat exchanger with a small volume, the defrosting operation can be performed for the minimum necessary duration as described above.
(46) Although the present disclosure has been described above based on the embodiment, the present disclosure is not limited to the configuration of the embodiment described above. For example, the air-conditioning apparatus may include other components in addition to the compressor 1, the four-way valve 2, the outdoor heat exchanger 3, the expansion valve 4, and the indoor heat exchanger 5. In short, it is noted that the scope of various modifications, applications, and uses, which are done or made by those skilled in the art as necessary, is included in the gist (technical scope) of the present disclosure.
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
(47) 1 compressor, 2 four-way valve, 3 outdoor heat exchanger, 4 expansion valve, 5 indoor heat exchanger, 6 controller, 7 first temperature detecting unit, 8 second temperature detecting unit, 10 casing, 10a front panel, 10b right side panel, 10c right side cover, 10d rear panel, 10e bottom panel, 10f top plate, 11 fan grille, 12 partition plate, 13 fan chamber, 14 machine chamber, 15 mounting plate, 16, 17 fan, 30 heat transfer fins, 30a heat transfer tube insertion hole, 31 heat transfer tube, 32a first branch tube, 32b second branch tube, 32c connecting pipe, 100 room outdoor tube, 101 refrigeration cycle, A upper path, B lower path, t1 first target temperature, t2 second target temperature.