Air Conditioning and Refrigeration: Muhammad Bilal Khan
Air Conditioning and Refrigeration: Muhammad Bilal Khan
Refrigeration
Muhammad Bilal Khan
Course Description
Prerequisite:
ME 221 Thermodynamics II
Credit Hours :
3 (2-1)
Recommended Books:
Refrigeration & Air Conditioning Technology, 5th
Edition, by William C. Whitman, William M. Johnson,
John Tomczyk
Continue
Refrigeration and Air-conditioning, 3rd Edition, by
A. R. Trott, T. Welch.
Thermal Environmental Engineering, 3rd Edition,
by Thomas H. Kuehn, James W. Ramsey, James L.
Threlkeld.
ASHRAE Handbook, by American Society of
Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning
Engineers
Course Outline
o Introduction
o Refrigerants and their properties
o Vapor-compression refrigeration cycle
o System analysis
o Food and transport refrigeration
o Refrigeration compressors
o Expansion valves
o Multi- stage vapor-compression refrigeration
o Absorption refrigeration systems
o Thermoelectric cooling
o Flash cooling, Gas cycle refrigeration
o Steam jet refrigeration
o Ultra-low-temperature refrigeration
o Applications in air conditioning.
Introduction
Refrigeration
is
the
process
of
removing heat, and the practical
application is to produce or maintain
temperatures below the ambient.
Refrigeration is therefore the science
of moving heat from low temperature
to high temperature.
H= U+ Pv
Law:
pV = constant
Charles Law:
= constant
Daltons Law:
Total pressure of mixture is equal to
some of individual pressure of
substance (Gas)
Laws of Thermodynamics
Zeroth Law:
TA = TB & TB = TC
Than
TA = T C
First Law:
Energy can neither be converted nor be destroyed but
change from one form to another.
Second law:
It is impossible to construct an engine working
in a cyclic process, whose sole purpose is to
convert heat energy from single thermal
reservoir into an equivalent amount of work.
Thermodynamic process
There are two processes
Reversible process
Properties at intermediate stage are in
equilibrium.
Irreversible process
Properties at intermediate stage are
not in equilibrium.
Thermodynamic Processes
Thermodynamic systems
System:
A thermodynamic system is a collection of matter which has distinct boundaries.
Types of System:
Open system An open system is one in which both mass &
energy transfer takes place across the boundaries.
Example: An open tank of water
Closed system Closed system in which there is no transfer of
mass takes place across the boundaries of system but energy
transfer is possible.
Example: A gas in a balloon
Isolated system An isolated system is that in which there is no
transfer of mass & energy takes place across the boundaries of
system.
Example : A thermo flask containing hot or cold liquid
Properties of system
Two main types of properties are:
Intensive properties
Intensive properties are independent of mass.
For example Melting Point, Boiling Point, Density,
Temperature, Pressure, viscosity. etc
Extensive properties
Process-1
Use ideal gas assumption (closed system):
Q U P (V2 V1 ) (U 2 U1 ) P (V2 V1 )
(U 2 PV2 ) (U1 PV1 ) H 2 H1 H
Process-2
Q-W=U, -W=U
- W=dU (infinitesimal increment of work and energy)
mRT
dU+PdV=0, mc v dT
dV 0
V
cv dT
dV
RT
cv dT
dV
0,
R T
V
V
c v =constant
cv T2
ln ln
R T1
2
V
T 2
,
T 1
V1
Rc
V1
V
2
V1
V2
k 1
Process-3
k 1
T2 V1
T1 V2
V1
PV=RT,
V2
T2 T1
T1 T2
T1 P2
, substitute
T2 P1
k 1
P2
P1
( k 1)
T2 P2
T1 P1
T2
, multiply
T1
, and
P2
V1
P1
V2
k 1
k cons tan t
Also PV
PV
and
pV
1 1
2 2
k
Process-4
Polytropic Process: its P-V relation can be expressed as
PVn = constant, where n is a constant for a specific process
Isothermal, T=constant, if the gas is an ideal gas then
PV=RT=constant, n=1
Isobaric, P=constant, n=0 (for all substances)
Constant-volume, V=constant, V=constant(P)(1/n), n= (for
all substances)
Adiabatic process, n=k for an ideal gas
n
n
n
PV
PV
PV
1 1
2 2
2
n
n
W PdV ( PV
)
V
dV
1 1
2
n
(
PV
PV
n
n
1 n
1 n
1 1 )
2 2 PV
1 1
( PV
)
V
dV
(
V
V
)
1 1
2
1
1
n
1 n
1
Thanks