Improved Evaporative Condenser
20170153048 ยท 2017-06-01
Inventors
Cpc classification
F28C1/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2339/046
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B39/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28C1/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D3/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28B1/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2339/041
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D7/082
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B39/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02B30/70
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
An evaporative condenser for use in a refrigeration or air-conditioning system includes one or more condensing coils arranged in a condensing coil zone. The coils condense therewithin a refrigerant of the system. The condenser also includes a mechanism for wetting the one or more condensing coils. The condenser further includes drift eliminators arranged to remove free water from an airstream A that has flowed past the one or more condensing coils and wetting mechanism. The condenser additionally includes a divergent zone that diverges from the condensing coil zone towards the drift eliminators such that, once the airstream has flowed past the one or more condensing coils, it flows into and through the divergent zone to the drift eliminators.
Claims
1.-19. (canceled)
20. An evaporative condenser for use in a refrigeration or air-conditioning system, the condenser comprising: one or more condensing coils arranged in a condensing coil zone, the coils for condensing therewithin a refrigerant of the system; a mechanism for wetting the one or more condensing coils; drift eliminators arranged to remove free water from an airstream that has flowed past the one or more condensing coils and wetting mechanism; a divergent zone that diverges from the condensing coil zone towards the drift eliminators such that, once the airstream has flowed past the one or more condensing coils, it flows into and through the divergent zone to the drift eliminators.
21. The condenser according to claim 20, wherein the one or more condensing coils are arranged as a bundle in the condensing coil zone.
22. The condenser according to claim 21, wherein the condensing coil zone comprises a section of the condenser of generally constant cross-sectional area.
23. The condenser according to claim 20, wherein the divergent zone is configured to cause the airstream flowing therein to decelerate before reaching the drift eliminators.
24. The condenser according to claim 21, wherein the divergent zone comprises a hollow frustum through which the airstream flows.
25. The condenser according to claim 21, wherein the drift eliminators are immediately located at an air leaving side of the divergent zone.
26. The condenser according to claim 21, further comprising an air inlet chamber located at an air entry side of the condensing coil zone.
27. The condenser according to claim 21, wherein the mechanism for wetting the one or more condensing coils comprises spray nozzles that are arranged with respect to the divergent zone to spray water into the one or more condensing coils in a direction counter to the airstream flow through the one or more condensing coils.
28. The condenser according to claim 27, wherein the nozzles are arranged in the divergent zone so as to spray the water generally as a liquid cone onto the one or more condensing coils.
29. The condenser according to claim 20, further comprising a collection zone for collecting water that has passed through condensing coil zone, and a recycling system for recycling collected water to the wetting mechanism.
30. The condenser according to claim 29, wherein the recycling system comprises a pump for pumping the collected water via pipework to the wetting mechanism and, as necessary, a water make-up mechanism for maintaining a predetermined amount of water for effective operation of the evaporative condenser.
31. The condenser according to claim 29, further comprising a heat exchanger through which the collected water is passed prior to recycling it to the wetting mechanism, and through which the condensed refrigerant is passed to exchange heat with the recycled collected water.
32. The condenser according to claim 20, wherein each of the one or more condensing coils comprises stainless steel tube.
33. An evaporative condenser for use in a refrigeration or air-conditioning system, the condenser comprising: one or more condensing coils arranged in a condensing coil zone, the coils for condensing therewithin a refrigerant of the system; a mechanism for wetting the one or more condensing coils; drift eliminators arranged to remove free water from an airstream that has flowed past the one or more condensing coils and wetting mechanism; a collection zone for collecting water that has passed through condensing coil zone; a recycling system for recycling collected water to the wetting mechanism; and a heat exchanger through which the collected water is passed prior to recycling it to the wetting mechanism, and through which the condensed refrigerant is passed to exchange heat with the recycled collected water.
34. The condenser according to claim 33, further comprising a divergent zone that diverges from the condensing coil zone towards the drift eliminators such that, once the airstream has flowed past the one or more condensing coils, it flows into and through the divergent zone to the drift eliminators.
35. An evaporative condensation process forming part of a refrigeration or air-conditioning cycle, the process comprising: passing refrigerant through one or more condensing coils; wetting the one or more condensing coils with water; passing an airstream over the one or more wetted condensing coils whereby refrigerant is caused to condense within the coils, and whereby a portion of the water is caused to evaporate into the airstream; eliminating water that is present in the airstream leaving the one or more condensing coils; wherein the velocity of the airstream leaving the one or more condensing coils is caused to decelerate prior to eliminating the water that is present in the airstream.
36. An evaporative condensation process forming part of a refrigeration or air-conditioning cycle, the process comprising: passing refrigerant through one or more condensing coils; wetting the one or more condensing coils with water; collecting the water that passes through the one or more condensing coils and recycling it to wet the one or more condensing coils with water; passing an airstream over the one or more wetted condensing coils whereby refrigerant is caused to condense within the coils, and whereby a portion of the water is caused to evaporate into the airstream; eliminating water that is present in the airstream leaving the one or more condensing coils; and exchanging heat between the condensed refrigerant and the collected water prior to recycling it to wet the one or more condensing coils.
37. The process according to claim 35, wherein the process takes place in an evaporative condenser that comprises: one or more condensing coils arranged in a condensing coil zone, the coils for condensing therewithin a refrigerant of the system; a mechanism for wetting the one or more condensing coils; drift eliminators arranged to remove free water from an airstream that has flowed past the one or more condensing coils and wetting mechanism; and a divergent zone that diverges from the condensing coil zone towards the drift eliminators such that, once the airstream has flowed past the one or more condensing coils, it flows into and through the divergent zone to the drift eliminators.
38. A process as claimed in claim 36, wherein the process takes place in an evaporative condenser that comprises: one or more condensing coils arranged in a condensing coil zone, the coils for condensing therewithin a refrigerant of the system; a mechanism for wetting the one or more condensing coils; drift eliminators arranged to remove free water from an airstream that has flowed past the one or more condensing coils and wetting mechanism; and a divergent zone that diverges from the condensing coil zone towards the drift eliminators such that, once the airstream has flowed past the one or more condensing coils, it flows into and through the divergent zone to the drift eliminators.
39. The process according to claim 35, wherein the refrigerant condensed in the one or more condensing coils comprises a chemical or natural refrigerant.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0038] Notwithstanding any other forms which may fall within the scope of the condenser and process as set forth in the Summary, specific embodiments will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
[0046]
[0047]
[0048]
[0049]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS
[0050] Specific forms of an evaporative condenser, and an evaporative condensation process that form part of a refrigeration or air-conditioning system/cycle, will now be described.
[0051] Evaporative condenser embodiments designated 10 and 100 are respectively shown in
[0052] In
[0053] The preferred evaporative condenser 10 of
[0054] The evaporative condenser 10 also comprises a mechanism in the form of spray nozzles 14 formed in a distributor tube 15 for wetting the condensing coil bundles 12 by spraying them with cones 16 of water (e.g. at a rate of 3 kg/m.sup.2 as shown). Alternatively, water distribution channels, such as those having serrated edges or internal slots, can be employed.
[0055] The spray nozzles 14 are arranged to spray water onto the condensing coil bundles 12 in a direction that is counter to the airstream flow therethrough as shown.
[0056] The evaporative condenser 10 also comprises a fan arranged in a fan housing at an upper end of the condenser. Such an arrangement is actually shown in the embodiment of
[0057] In the embodiment of
[0058] In the embodiment of
[0059] The evaporative condenser 10 further comprises drift eliminators 30 which are arranged within the condenser adjacent to an upper end thereof. The drift eliminators 30 remove free water from the airstream once it has flowed past the condensing coil bundles 12 and spray nozzles 14.
[0060] In the embodiment of
[0061] However, in the embodiment of
[0062] In the embodiment of
[0063] It will be seen that the drift eliminators 30 are arranged immediately at the air exit of the divergent airflow plenum 40, whereby the airflow is not permitted to decelerate more than is necessary.
[0064] Thus, the embodiment of
[0065] However, in the embodiment of
[0066] The convergent airflow zone 135 is configured to cause the airstream A to accelerate, such as in a gradually increasing manner. Conversely, the divergent airflow zone 140 is configured to cause the airstream to decelerate, such as in a gradually decreasing manner. This means that the velocity of air passing through the intermediate airflow zone 113 and over the condensing coil bundles 112 is increased, relative to the velocity of air that passes into the air inlet chamber 122 as well as through the drift eliminators 130. For example, in the configuration depicted, the airflow rate in the intermediate airflow zone 113 is approximately double at 5 m/s, (i.e. about 45% higher than) the 3.5 m/s air velocity through the drift eliminators.
[0067] In either embodiment, and as a result of this increased airflow rate passing over the condensing coil bundles 12, 112, it has surprisingly been discovered that a condensing coil bundle with a reduced plan area, relative to the drift eliminators 30, 130 can be employed. As a further consequence of this increased airflow rate, it has surprisingly been discovered that less condensing coil is required for the same condenser heat rejection performance.
[0068] The result is that a lower cost evaporative condenser can be produced, as the condensing coil bundle represents the single-most expensive component of the condenser. Alternatively, instead of using known thick-wall, hot-dipped galvanized carbon steel condensing tube for the coil bundle 12, 112 a more expensive and/or stronger material, such as stainless steel tube, can be used to form the coil bundle 12, 112. In such case, the result is longer coil life, less corrosion and, if desired, thinner wall material for the tube in the coil bundle. In this regard, the coil bundle 12, 112 can comprise stainless steel tube, such as 304 or 316 stainless steel of 4.76-31.8 mm outside diameter and 0.5-1.6 mm thickness. Such tube is observed to perform well in comparison to known condensing coil tube of galvanized mild carbon steel. The corrosion and chemical resistance, as well as increased refrigerant pressure capacity, that is provided by such stainless steel tube materials also allows a natural refrigerant, such as a propane and/or isobutane hydrocarbon, CO.sub.2, ammonia, etc, to be employed in the evaporative condenser 10, 100.
[0069] Another consequence of the increased airflow rate over the condensing coils is that an increased flow of refrigerant can be passed through the condensing coil bundle 12, 112 because the greater air velocity is able to bring about condensation of a relatively greater amount of refrigerant.
[0070] The condenser 10 also comprises a water collection zone in the form of a basin 50 located at a base of (i.e. adjacent to) the air inlet chamber 22. The basin 50 collects excess spray water that has passed through or from condensing coils.
[0071] To maximize condenser efficiency, the condenser 10 additionally comprises a recycling system for recycling the collected water to the distributor tube 15 for feeding to the spray nozzles 14. In this regard, the recycling system comprises a pump 52 for pumping the collected water via pipework to the distributor tube 15. The pump 52 draws water out of the basin 50 via an offtake pipe 54. A delivery pipe section 56 then extends from the pump outlet to connect with the distributor tube 15.
[0072] The recycling system also comprises water make-up 58 (e.g. at 383 kg/h) for maintaining a predetermined amount of water in the basin 50 for effective operation of the evaporative condenser. Such make-up water can include a supply of water that has been eliminated (captured) by the drift eliminators 30.
[0073] In a variation of the evaporative condenser shown in the detail of
[0074] In this variation, the condensed refrigerant in the condenser tubes can also be passed via refrigerant delivery pipe 62 to and through the heat exchange unit 60 to exchange heat with the recycled water from the basin 50. In the heat exchange unit 60 the relatively cool basin water can sub-cool the condensed refrigerant, for example, from 30 C. to around 26.5 C. This can further improve the operational efficiency of the refrigerating system. The refrigerant (e.g. CO.sub.2) leaving the heat exchange unit 60 as the stream 64 can be at a sub-cooled temperature (e.g. around 26.5 C.).
EXAMPLES
[0075] Non-limiting examples of the present condenser and process will now be provided in order to illustrate the theoretical basis of the condenser and process, and to better understand the condenser and process in operation.
Example 1Process Design Model
[0076] A design model for the application to subcritical CO.sub.2 condensing of evaporative condensers, such as those depicted in
[0077] Firstly, however, it was noted that ammonia can be condensed at 30 C. in an evaporative condenser with an entering air wet bulb temperature of 24 C. In the developed design model it was shown that an evaporative condenser for subcritical CO.sub.2 condensing at 30 C. (i.e. 1.1 K below the critical point) was able to be designed for a wet bulb of 24 C.
[0078] Secondly, it was noted that average climate conditions in much of Europe, including the warmer climates in Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey, were suitable for evaporative condensers to condense subcritical CO.sub.2 at 30 C. Canada, large parts of the USA and China, and most of Australia below the tropic of Capricorn were also noted to have climates suitable for the application of evaporative condensers to subcritical CO.sub.2 condensing. The thermodynamic and transport properties of subcritical CO.sub.2 at 30 C. were noted to change significantly with temperature. Thus, the effect these changes have on CO.sub.2 temperature profile, heat transfer and pressure loss for a particular design was also shown.
[0079] For example, an examination of average climate conditions revealed that much of Europe, including Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey, has a climate where evaporative condensers may be applied for the condensing of CO.sub.2 at subcritical conditions at a condensing temperature of 30 C. or lower 100% of the time in many locations. For example, the only location in Europe where the 5% design Wet Bulb temperature incidence exceeded 24 C. was Adana in Turkey (where the 1 and 2.5% wet bulb incidence design levels are at 26 C.). At Thessaloniki in Greece the 1% wet bulb design incidence is at 25 C., but the 2.5% and 5% wet bulb design incidence levels are at 24 C. The next highest 1% wet bulb design incidence level of 24 C. occurred at Gibraltar, Barcelona, Valencia, Milan, Istanbul and Izmir.
[0080] Finally, it was concluded that the use of evaporative condensers for CO.sub.2 in temperate and many subtropical climates could make CO.sub.2 refrigeration as ubiquitous as any chemical refrigerant and would compete successfully with ammonia when it needed to be used in an indirect application (such as the heating and cooling of office buildings and hospitals for example).
[0081] When CO.sub.2 refrigeration was revived about 20 years ago, air cooled gas cooling (some with adiabatic assistance by spraying water onto the air inlet face of the finned coil gas cooler) was applied almost universally. It was noted that this resulted in virtually all CO.sub.2 refrigeration systems needing to run in trans-critical mode because the air cooling temperature is close to, or exceeds, the CO.sub.2 critical temperature of 31.1 C.
[0082] More often than not the summer design CO.sub.2 exit temperatures from an air cooled gas cooler were higher than the critical temperature, and this resulted in the compressors needing to operate at a pressure of 90 bar or higher to ensure a reasonable COP. The summer design COPs of trans-critical CO.sub.2 compressors were generally lower than those of air cooled HFC or evaporatively cooled ammonia systems.
[0083] It was therefore proposed to reduce the temperature of the condenser cooling medium to a level which would allow a complete subcritical CO.sub.2 refrigeration cycle. This was accomplished with an evaporative condenser, where the ambient air Wet Bulb (WB) temperature was the effective cooling medium temperature, rather than the ambient air Dry Bulb (DB) temperature in the case of an air cooled condenser or gas cooler.
[0084] Issues noted included the need for a water supply, water consumption and water treatment, and control of a minimum condensing temperature as currently mandated by some compressor suppliers. Another issue was the control strategies to handle inadvertent trans-critical conditions. Recommendations were made to address these issues.
A Rating Model for a CO.SUB.2 .Evaporative Condenser
Rating Example
[0085]
[0086] The specified parameters were: (a) air velocity and wet and dry bulb temperatures, (b) spray water flow rate, (c) bundle dimensions, and (d) leaving CO.sub.2 comprising saturated liquid at 30 C. and 7.2 MPa.
Mass and Energy Balances in Evaporative Coolers
[0087] Qureshi (2006) and Heyns (2009) published five simultaneous non-linear differential equations describing air-water-process fluid interactions in evaporative cooling.
[0088] The equations were solved by writing a program using a fourth order Runge-Kutta routine written in Microsoft's VBA behind a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet with pass length divided into forty intervals. The solution was trial and error because the basin water temperature at air entry was guessed and adjusted iteratively until it was the same as the calculated water temperature at the air exit.
[0089] The solution proceeded backwards along a tube pass from CO.sub.2 exit to entry, starting at the air inlet with saturated liquid refrigerant at 30 C., and proceeded up, as if heating, ending with superheated vapour at a calculated discharge temperature. The program allowed for both two-phase condensation and single phase vapour de-superheating.
Verifying the Model.
[0090] There was no analytical solution to the five equations by which the numerical solution can be validated. However, two findings were noted: when the leaving and entering water temperatures were equal; (a) the CO.sub.2 enthalpy change was equal to the moist air enthalpy change, and (b) the heat duty calculated for ammonia condensing at 30 C. was within 9% of duty computed using the simplified Merkel model (Merkel, 1926) which is based on constant condensing temperature.
Model Predictions
[0091]
[0092] The model predicted that 67% of exchanger surface would be needed for sensible cooling. Enthalpy data for CO.sub.2 at 30 C., close to the critical point, showed that 68% of the rejection was sensible cooling, unlike ammonia where it is only 10%.
[0093] Water temperature profile was skewed to the left, compared to profiles where sensible cooling was relatively small, reflecting the larger proportion of sensible cooling for CO.sub.2 near the critical point.
Water Evaporation
[0094]
Effect of Property Changes
[0095]
[0096] In the model 0.845 was used for the Lewis number in equation (3). With a Lewis number of 1.00, the surface area required for the same heat duty was reduced by only 1.4%.
Remarks
[0097] The case modelled was extreme in the respect that CO.sub.2 condensing at 30 C. was very close to its critical point. It was noted that at lower condensing temperatures the proportion of sensible cooling would reduce and the variation of properties with temperature would be much reduced. Reference was made to
[0098] It was further noted that heat rejection predicted by the Merkel simplified model was about 22% lower than the differential model with CO.sub.2 condensing at 30 C., which was not unexpected given the significant proportion of sensible cooling.
CO.SUB.2 .Compressor Subcritical Energy Performance
Effect of Condensing Temperature on Cycle Performance
[0099] In
[0100] Referring to curve 1 in
[0101] Curve 2 showed the COP ranging from 4.45 to 11.67 at 30 C. to 16 C. SCT at an SST of +5 C. This would allow chilled water production for AC for retrofitting into existing buildings and application to new buildings.
[0102] In both the above two cases the AC compressors could act also as parallel compressors for refrigeration duties at 5 C. SST, such as maintaining chill storage temperatures at around 0 C. and high stage duties for two stage CO.sub.2 systems applied to cold storage and blast freezing applications.
[0103] In such cases the high stage compressors would operate with virtual CO.sub.2 gas cooler exit temperatures of +5 C. and +10 C., which resulted in COP curves 3 and 4 respectively. COP curve 3 ranged from 4.7 to 7.88 at an SST of 5 C. at SCTs ranging from +30 to +16 C. and a virtual gas cooler exit of +5 C. COP curve 4 showed the COP ranging 4.45 to 7.04 with a virtual gas cooler exit of +10 C., and SST of 5 C. and the SCT ranging from +30 to +16 C. It was noted that this could be improved with a Suction Heat Exchanger (SHEX) in the compressor suction to bring the performance closer to curve 3.
Effect of Ambient Wet Bulb Temperature on Condenser Performance
[0104]
TABLE-US-00001 Total Sat. Ambient heat Cond. air Leaving air Mass fluxes Pressure Full Gross rejection Temp. condition condition G kg/m.sup.2 .Math. s drops power heat (THR) (SCT) DB WB DB RH CO.sub.2 Air Water CO.sub.2 Air cons., flux kW C. C. C. C. % G.sub.CO2 Gair Gh.sub.2o kPa Pa BkW kW/m.sup.2 470 30 35 24 28.7 100 240 3.46 3.0 5 60 1.8 3.22 596 30 35 22 28.3 99.9 305 3.46 3.0 8 60 1.8 4.08 712 30 35 20 27.9 99.8 364 3.46 3.0 11 60 1.8 4.87 658 28 30 18 25.7 99.8 312 3.52 3.0 8 62 1.85 4.50 545 24 24 14 21.5 99.7 236 3.59 3.0 6 62 1.85 3.73 475 20 18 10 17.3 99.5 193 3.66 3.0 4 63 1.9 3.25 407 16 12 6 13.3 99.4 157 3.74 3.0 3 63 1.9 2.78 NB. Tube bundle: 84 circuits, 8 passes, 146.2 m.sup.2
Relative Energy Efficiency of Ammonia, R22, R507A, Propane, and R134a
[0105] The COPs for these refrigerants at identical operating conditions were shown in
Overall Heat Transfer Factor, Uo
[0106] Referring again to
[0107] The average Uo in
[0108] As with evaporators, the high P/T ratio of CO.sub.2 allowed high mass fluxes in the condenser circuits giving high rates of heat transfer, allowing fewer longer circuits, which also made for more economical manufacture of the tube bundle.
[0109] It was noted that ammonia mass fluxes in evaporative condensers range from about 25 to 40 kg/m2.Math.s and are frequently lower than 25. The pressure drop was a concern with ammonia condensers, as excessive pressure drop in an ammonia evaporative condenser lifts the discharge pressure, and thus the Saturated Condensing Temperature (SCT), resulting in increased energy consumption.
Consequences of Minimum Airflow
[0110] Again referring to
CONCLUSION
[0111] Subject to satisfactory performance testing of a full scale prototype CO.sub.2 evaporative condenser, it was concluded that the application of the evaporative condensers in the higher latitude subtropics with maximum design Wet Bulb (WB) temperatures of 24 to 25 C. showed a great deal of promise. The CO.sub.2 evaporative showed even more promise in areas with more temperate and cool to cold climates where ambient WB temperatures are lower.
[0112] According to the above conclusion, suitable areas for the application of evaporative condensers to the condensing of subcritical CO.sub.2 compressor discharge gases was thus feasible in virtually all of Europe (including the Mediterranean countries), the USA except for the Southern States bordering the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean, and many of the Mid West States as far North as Minnesota.
[0113] Experimentation also showed that evaporative gas cooling with ambient Wet Bulb temperatures of 28 to 29 C. and ambient air WB to CO.sub.2 exit temperature approaches of 3 K were entirely feasible. This was ascribed to the fact that, in trans-critical mode, there was only sensible heat transfer at a larger LMTD without the condensing phase (
[0114] The application of evaporative cooling to both the condensing of CO.sub.2 at subcritical and gas cooling at trans-critical CO.sub.2 resulted in efficient refrigeration at high COPs which were comparable to, and in many cases higher than, the COPs achieved with conventional refrigerants operating below their critical points. This opened the way for the worldwide application of CO.sub.2 refrigeration. This is particularly true in applications where CO.sub.2 is used for Air Conditioning duties at +5 and +10 C. compressor Saturated Suction Temperature for chilled water, and DX or pumped CO.sub.2 AC applications respectively.
[0115] It was further noted that the AC compressors may also act as parallel compressors for any remaining refrigeration duties in a facility such as a supermarket where both chilling and freezing duties are required at high to very high COPs as shown in
[0116] Indeed, when comparing
[0117] At a high Wet Bulb temperature of e.g. 28 C. conventional evaporative condensers would be able to operate at 40 C. SCT resulting in COPs of 3.37, 3.34, 2.71, 2.96 and 2.38 for NH.sub.3, R22, R507A, propane and R134a respectively as shown in
Nomenclature
[0118] In the Examples:
TABLE-US-00002 a outside surface area m.sup.2 m.sub.a air flow rate kg dry air s.sup.1 m.sub.w water flow rate kg s.sup.1 m.sub.r CO.sub.2 flow rate kg s.sup.1 i.sub.masw saturated air enthalpy at air-water interface J kg.sup.1 dry air h.sub.a air enthalpy J kg.sup.1 dry air h.sub.d mass transfer coefficient kg i.sub.v water vapour enthalpy J kg.sup.1 T.sub.w water temperature C. Le Lewis number T.sub.r CO.sub.2 temperature C. C.sub.pw heat capacity of liquid water J kg.sup.1 K.sup.1 C.sub.pa heat capacity of moist air J kg.sup.1 K.sup.1 U.sub.o overall heat transfer coefficient W m.sup.2 K.sup.1 W air humidity ratio kg water kg.sup.1 dry air W.sub.int air humidity ratio at air-water interface kg water kg.sup.1 dry air h.sub.w water-tube heat transfer coefficient W m.sup.2 K.sup.1 h.sub.i CO.sub.2 heat transfer coefficient W m.sup.2 K.sup.1 d.sub.i tube inside diameter m d.sub.o tube outside diameter m ff fouling factor K m.sup.2 W.sup.1
Model Parameters
[0119] 1. NIST (2011) data were used for thermodynamic and transport properties of saturated and superheated CO.sub.2; [0120] 2. h.sub.w in equation (6) was calculated from Mizushima and Miyasita (1967), equation (A.8) in Qureshi and Zubair (2006); [0121] 3. h.sub.d in equation (3) was calculated from Mizushima and Miyasita (1967), equation (A.13) in Qureshi and Zubair (2006); [0122] 4. For two phase CO.sub.2 flow, h.sub.i in equation (6) was calculated from Shah's (2009), Qureshi and Zubair (2006) equations (A.6) and (A.7); pressure loss was calculated from Mller-Steinhagen and Heck correlation (ASHRAE, 2005); [0123] 5. For single phase CO.sub.2 vapour flow, h.sub.i in equation (6) was calculated from the Dittus-Boelter correlation Nu=0.023Re.sup.0.8Pr.sup.0.3; pressure loss was calculated from a friction factor=0.079Re.sup.0.25; [0124] 6. Air pressure drop across the tube bank was calculated from Mills (1999), section 4.5.1, p. 316.
THE FOLLOWING REFERENCES WERE USED IN FORMULATING THE MODEL
[0125] 1. ASHRAE, 2005, 2005 Fundamentals, page 4.12-13 [0126] 2. Heyns J, Kroger D, 2009, Performance characteristics of an air-cooled steam condenser incorporating a hybrid (dry/wet) dephlegmator, Appendix A, PIER Report, CEC-500-2013-065-APA [0127] 3. Merkel, F., 1926, Verdunstungskuling, VDI-Zeitschrift, Vol. 70, pp. 123-128 [0128] 4. Mills A. F., 1999, Basic Heat & Mass Transfer, 2nd ed., A. F., Prentice Hall. [0129] 5. Mizushima, T., R. Ito and H. Miyasita, 1967, Experimental study of an evaporative cooler, International Chemical Engineering, Vol. 7, pp. 727-732 [0130] 6. NIST 2011, http://webbook.nist.gov/chemistry/fluid/ Thermophysical Properties of Fluid Systems [0131] 7. Qureshi B, Zubair S, 2006, A comprehensive design and rating study of evaporative coolers and condensers. Part I Performance evaluation, Int. J. Refrigeration, 29: 645-658. [0132] 8. Shah M, 2009, An improved and extended general correlation for heat transfer during condensation in plain tubes, HVAC&R Research, 15 (5) [0133] 9. Pearson, S. Forbes, 2010, Use of carbon dioxide for air conditioning and general refrigeration, IIR-IOR 1.sup.st Cold Chain Conference, Cambridge, UK.
Example 2Design Model Outputs
[0134] The following data points were produced by the design model to illustrate condenser capacity variation with the superficial air velocity:
[0135] Whilst a number of condenser and process embodiments and models have been described, it should be appreciated that the condenser and process may be embodied in many other forms.
[0136] For example, the plenum 13 could be of circular section, whereby the divergent plenum 40 comprises a conical frustum, or a square to circular frustum-like prism. However, such a configuration is less favoured, as it does not promote free drainage of water within the condenser.
[0137] In the claims which follow, and in the preceding description, except where the context requires otherwise due to express language or necessary implication, the word comprise and variations such as comprises or comprising are used in an inclusive sense, i.e. to specify the presence of the stated features but not to preclude the presence or addition of further features in various embodiments of the condenser and process as disclosed herein.