Chiller Types and Application Guide
Chiller Types and Application Guide
Chiller types and application guide. In this article we’ll be covering the different types of chillers available,
where they are used as well as the pros and cons of each chiller type along with some examples of where
they’re used. We’ll be covering air cooled chillers, water cooled chillers, centrifugal compressor chillers,
turbocor compressor chillers, screw compressor chiller, scroll compressor chiller, reciprocating compressor
chillers. Scroll to the bottom of the article to watch the video tutorial.
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Purpose of a chiller
Just to recap on your previous knowledge of chillers. Chillers are simply machines used to generate cold
or chilled water which is distributed around buildings to provide air conditioning. They are also used in
some industrial processes but we’re going to primarily focus on their application in air conditioning of
buildings typically with Air Handling Units and Fan Coil Units
As you can imagine there are a lot of different types of chillers and they are categorised by types, so its
important you understand what the names mean, the differences between them and when and where
they are used as well as why.
The first way to categorise a chiller is by defining whether it is a vapor compression or vapor absorption
type chiller.
V
apor-compression and vapor-absorption chillers
Vapour compression chillers and Vapor absorption chillers
Vapour compression chillers use an electrically driven mechanical compressor to force a refrigerant around
the system. These are the most common types of chillers. There are two sub categories for vapor
compression chillers which are water cooled or air-cooled chillers and we’ll look at these shortly.
Vapor absorption chillers will use a heat source to move the refrigerant around the system rather than
using a mechanical compressor. The refrigerant in these chillers move around between areas of different
temperature and pressure. Click here to watch the video tutorial on these chillers.
air cooled and water-cooled chillers explained.
Looking at vapor compression chillers, the two main types are air cooled and water cooled. Both types of
chillers have the same essential components which are, the evaporator, the compressor, the condenser,
and the expansion valve. When we talk about air cooled or water cooled this simply refers to the way in
which the unwanted heat is ejected from the building via the chillers condenser.
The working principle for both air cooled and water cooled chillers is the same. A compressor pushes a
refrigerant round the inside of the chiller between the condenser, expansion valve, evaporator and back to
the compressor. The only difference is that with an air-cooled chiller, fans force air across the exposed
tubes of the condenser which carry the heat away. Water cooled chillers have a sealed condenser and
water is pumped through to take the heat away and disperse this through the cooling tower. The cooling
tower will also use a fan to reject the heat. Watch the video tutorial on how cooling towers work here
Where are these chillers typically used? – chiller types and application guide?
Chiller cooling loads, large medium and small buildings
Large buildings with cooling loads in excess of 400 tons of refrigeration or 1,400 kW typically use water
cooled chillers with either centrifugal compressors or Turbocor compressors within the central plant
cooling system. They might also use a separate smaller air-cooled chiller to handle the critical cooling
loads such as computer and communication rooms. There might also be an absorption chiller within the
central plant system, making use of waste heat, for example from a CHP engine, but these are mostly
used alongside mechanical chillers.
Medium sized buildings with a cooling load of around 200 – 400 tons of refrigeration or 700 – 1,400 kW
will typically use screw compressors or Turbocor compressors, these can be either water or air cooled,
we’ll look at why that would be just shortly. These buildings might also use an absorption chiller if enough
high quality heat is available
Small building with cooling loads under 200 tons or 700 kW will typically use scroll compressors or
Turbocor compressors and are typically of air cooled design. Again we’ll look at why just shortly, they
might also use a different system such as VRF units but this depends on the size of the building and the
cooling load.
Absorption chillers should only be used where there is an abundance of high quality waste heat or
cheap heat. They are often found in hospitals and buildings with heated swimming pools. If a commercial
office type building uses a combined heat and power (CHP) engine these are often coupled with an
absorption chiller which uses the waste heat from the combustion, but in this scenario, these are mostly
used in conjunction with electrically driven chillers. Sometimes they are used during times of day when
electricity prices peak.
If you have a building with a medium to large cooling load then its recommended that you do not use only
one oversized chiller to handle the entire cooling load. This is not efficient and if it fails you will have no
cooling capability left.
Instead you should use multiple chillers, in parallel, of different sizes to meet the changing seasonal load
at optimal performance with redundancy built in. For example you have a building with a cooling load of
2,200 Tons, then you should use combinations such as two 1,200 ton chillers or two 900 tones and a 500
ton or a 1,000 ton and two 700 ton chillers etc. The configuration options are almost limitless.
You also need to consider the criticality of the building and the redundancy required, known as N+1,
whereby “N” is the number of chillers you need and the “+1” or “+2” or “+3” etc is the number of backup
chillers needed to continue to meet cooling capacity in the event of a failure.
chiller fault and failure
This is used so that if a chiller fails you have a backup always ready to come online to take over and
handle the cooling load. You might need to use chillers with multiple compressors that can work
independently from one another so that if 1 compressor fails the chiller can still remain partly operational.
How to decide between air cooled and water cooled – Chiller types
and application guide
Water cooled chillers.
Pros.
Water cooled chillers are more efficient, especially for large cooling loads, they use the
evaporation of water to dissipate heat which is less energy intensive than blowing air across a
hot surface like air cooled chillers. Water also has a higher heat capacity than air so its
inherently easier to remove the heat.
Water cooled chillers can handle larger loads, for their floor space, compared to air cooled.
Water cooled chillers generally last longer because they are inside the building so deteriorate
much slower
Cons
These use cooling towers and for this you need access to a constant clean water supply. If the
chiller is going to be installed in an area with water restrictions, then you don’t want this type.
Water cooled chillers are located within the building and are very large machines, so depending
on the compressor technology used, they can create a lot of noise and vibration inside the
building which is why they are usually located in the basement.
Water cooled chillers cost more to install and maintain.
Water cooled chillers take up space within the building, they need mechanical plant rooms,
more risers, more pumps, cooling towers and water treatment, this space therefore can’t be
used for business purposes.
Air cooled chillers.
Pros
Air cooled chillers cost less to install because they have less equipment.
Air cooled chillers require less space, they can sit on the roof and do not need a mechanical
room. This means more space within the building for business purposes.
Air cooled chillers require less maintenance compared to water cooled chillers, again because
they have less equipment.
Air cooled chiller systems are much simpler design and do not need another set of pumps for
the condenser.
Cons
Air cooled chillers sit outside the building, their fans and compressors will create noise which
the surrounding areas might be able to hear, although some measures can be implemented to
reduce this.
Air cooled chillers typically do not have as long a service life as water cooled chillers because
they are exposed to the sun, rain, frost, snow, and wind which deteriorate the materials.
Air cooled chillers can suffer from damage, blockages, and re-circulation issues.
Unfortunately, many building owners want the cheapest upfront option, but this is a bad idea
because for a little extra they could have bought a more efficient chiller which will be cheaper to
operate especially as chillers can last for around 15 – 25+ years in operation, so it will have paid
for itself multiple times and would have resulted in reduced environmental emissions.
The different compressor technologies currently available – Chiller types and
application guide
Centrifugal chillers
centrifugal chiller compressor
Water cooled chillers.
used in medium to large cooling loads.
Typically, available in 150 – 6,000 TR, 530 – 21,000 kW
Water cooled COP of between 5.8 to 7.1
Typically use only one compressor sometimes two for exceptionally large capacity
Work best at full loading, VFD can e fitted to improve part load
Use one or two rotating impellors to compress the refrigerant and force it around the chiller.
Capacity control through speed control and vane guides
Turbocor chillers
turbocor chiller compressor
Air or water-cooled chillers
Used in all cooling loads from large to small buildings.
Typically, available in 60 – 1500 TR, 210 – 5,200 kW
COP of 4.6 up to 10
One or more compressors used, staged and speed varied.
Variable speed controller, soft starter, magnetic bearings, only one moving part, oil free
Use two rotating impellors to compress the refrigerant.
Capacity control through speed control and vane guides
Reciprocating chillers
reciprocating chiller compressor
Air- or water-cooled chillers – old technology, less common now
Used in small to medium cooling loads – common in simple low-cost refrigerators.
Typically, available in 50 – 500 TR, 170 – 1,700 kW
COP of 4.2 to 5.5
Use a piston and chamber to compress refrigerant.
Capacity control through compressor staging or cylinder unloading and speed control.
Scroll chiller.
scroll chiller compressor.
Air or water-cooled chillers
Used in small to medium cooling loads.
Typically, available 40 – 400 TR, 140 – 1,400 kW
Air cooled COP 3.2 – 4.86 Water cooled COP 4.45 – 6.2
One or more compressors, fixed or variable speed, staged or speed controlled.
Use two spiral plates to compress the refrigerant, one fixed in place, one rotates.
Capacity controlled via momentarily separating scrolls with solenoid valve and electronic
modulation.
Screw chiller
screw chiller compressor
Air or water-cooled chillers
Used in small to medium cooling loads.
Typically, 70 – 600 TR, 250 – 2,100 kW
Air cooled COP 2.9 – 4.15 Water cooled COP: 4.7 – 6.07
Typically, 1 compressor on water cooled, 1 or 2 compressors on air cooled.
Uses two interlocking rotating helical rotors to compress the refrigerant, capacity is controlled
via speed control or slider.
Absorption chillers
absorption chiller
Use heat to drive the refrigeration process, usually steam or hot water.
Used in Medium to large buildings, Hospitals, Swimming centres, Heat Networks
Typically, 70 – 1,400 TR, 250 – 4,900 kW
COP of approx. 0.6 to 1.9
No compressor, direct or indirect fired. Capacity controlled via amount of heat entering.
Idea for using waste heat or cheap heat, sometimes used to offset peak electricity costs.
Typically combined with mechanical chillers