Monday, March 1, 2010

How efficient are air cooled chillers?

For some of us who have air conditioning chillers at home or industrial chillers in the offices, there are questions waiting to be answered. Only a few of us know how they truly work and there’s one thing that boggles the mind. When it comes to air cooled chillers, energy efficiency has become an ambiguous term.

Air cooled chillers remove heat from water or other fluids. This heat is then dispersed into air through a system called refrigeration.

It all starts when a fluid is forced with high pressure through a tube. This changes the fluid to turn into gas which absorbs heat through the evaporator heat exchanger. This gas then travels to the compressor where it is compressed into a hot gas before being pumped to the condenser. In the condenser, the gas is passed through small copper tubes with thin aluminum fins bonded to them. When ambient air is forced through the condenser via the process chiller’s fans, the gas is condensed back to a liquid state. In this process, the heat that the gas has collected is released through the chiller fans as well. The liquid is sent back to the tubes so that the whole process can start again.

The efficiency of an air cooled chiller depends on the efficiency of the chiller compressor. This can be measured through COP or Coefficient of Performance. A COP is the ratio of heat removed to the electrical input required. In chiller efficiency, the higher the COP is, the more energy efficient it is. If a COP is 5, it means that for every 1 KW of electrical energy input, 5 KW of heat is removed. If a COP is 10, it means that for every 8 KW of electrical energy input, 8KW of heat energy is removed.

Check out the COP of the chiller the next time you’re out chiller shopping. You can now tell the difference in terms of energy efficiency.

1 comment:

  1. thanks for the information about air cooled chiller. im still reading some information on chillers i hope i can buy someday for my small business.

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