Experimentally Validated Effects of Separation of Liquid and Vapor on Performance of Condenser and System 2017-01-0162
This paper presents the results of an experimental study to determine the effect of vapor-liquid refrigerant separation in a microchannel condenser of a MAC system. R134a is used as the working fluid. A condenser with separation and a baseline condenser identical on the air side have been tested to evaluate the difference in the performance due to separation. Two categories of experiments have been conducted: the heat exchanger-level test and the system-level test. In the heat exchanger-level test it is found that the separation condenser condenses from 1.6% to 7.4% more mass flow than the baseline at the same inlet and outlet temperature (enthalpy); the separation condenser condenses the same mass flow to a lower temperature than the baseline condenser does. In the system-level test, COP is compared under the same superheat, subcooling and refrigerating capacity. Separation condenser shows up to 6.6% a higher COP than the baseline condenser.
Citation: Li, J., Feng, L., and Hrnjak, P., "Experimentally Validated Effects of Separation of Liquid and Vapor on Performance of Condenser and System," SAE Technical Paper 2017-01-0162, 2017, https://doi.org/10.4271/2017-01-0162. Download Citation
Author(s):
Jun Li, Lili Feng, Pega Hrnjak
Affiliated:
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Pages: 8
Event:
WCX™ 17: SAE World Congress Experience
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Related Topics:
Refrigerants
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