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Technologies |
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How
Absorption Cooling Works
Like
the compressor in an electric vapor compression cycle,
the absorption system uses its "thermal" compressor (consisting
of the generator, absorber, pump and heat exchanger) to
boil water vapor (refrigerant) out of a lithium bromide/water
solution and compress the refrigerant vapor to a higher
pressure. Increasing
the refrigerant pressure also increases its condensing
temperature. The
refrigerant vapor condenses to a liquid at this higher
pressure and temperature. Because
this condensing temperature is hotter than the ambient
temperature, heat moves from the condenser to the
ambient air and is rejected.
The
high-pressure liquid then passes through a throttling
valve that reduces its pressure. Reducing
its pressure also reduces its boiling point temperature. The
low-pressure liquid then passes into the evaporator and
is boiled at this lower temperature and pressure. Because
the boiling temperature is now lower than the
temperature of the conditioned air, heat moves from the
conditioned air stream into the evaporator and causes
this liquid to boil. Removing
heat from the air in this manner causes the air to be
cooled.
The
refrigerant vapor then passes into the absorber where it
returns to a liquid state as it is pulled into the
lithium bromide solution (the absorption process). The
diluted lithium bromide solution is pumped back to the
generator. Because
lithium bromide (the absorbent) does not boil, water (the
refrigerant) is easily separated by adding heat. The
resultant water vapor passes into the condenser, the
absorbent solution returns to the absorber, and the
process repeats.
Simplified diagram of a single effect absorption cycle

Although the
process is similar to conventional electric vapor
compression systems, absorption cooling substitutes a
generator and absorber, called a thermal compressor, for
an electric compressor. Efficiency
and lower operating costs are achieved through the use
of a pump rather than a compressor and a heat exchanger
to recover and supply heat to the generator. Double-effect absorption cooling adds a second generator
and condenser to increase the refrigerant flow, and
therefore the cooling effect, for a fraction of the heat
input of a single-effect system. |
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