Variation and design criterion of heat load ratio of generator for air cooled lithium bromide–water double effect absorption chiller

2016 ◽  
Vol 96 ◽  
pp. 481-489 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zeyu Li ◽  
Liming Liu ◽  
Jinping Liu
Solar Energy ◽  
2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Bergquam ◽  
Joseph Brezner ◽  
Andrew Jensen

This paper presents results from a project sponsored by the California Energy Commission that involved the design and testing of an augmented generator for a solar fired, double effect absorption chiller. Solar powered absorption chillers use water heated by an array of solar collectors to boil a solution of lithium bromide and water. The energy transfer process between pressurized water heated by the solar collectors and the LiBr/H2O solution is the focus of this study. A method of augmenting the heat transfer in the generator was developed, bench tested and implemented in an operating 70kW solar HVAC system. The augmented design involved installing twisted stainless steel inserts in the tubes where the LiBr/H2O solution boils and refrigerant vapor is generated. The inserts increased the overall heat transfer coefficient between the heat medium in the shell side of the generator and the LiBr/H2O solution in the tubes. A solar-fired, double effect absorption chiller requires the collector array and storage tank to operate at temperatures in excess of 150°C. At these temperatures, the heating water must be at a pressure of about 700kPa to prevent it from boiling. This combination of high temperature and high pressure requires that the collectors, storage tanks, pumps, valves and piping be designed according to pressure vessel codes. This increases the initial cost of the system and also requires significant maintenance. The main objective of this work is to develop a method of lowering the requirements for a 150°C heating medium. The ultimate goal is to operate at about 120°C while maintaining the Coefficient of Performance and cooling capacity of the absorption chiller. The results presented in this paper show that the generator with twisted inserts can operate with an average log mean temperature difference of 10°C. The average COP of the chiller is about 1.0 and the chiller provided all of the cooling required by a 743 m2 building. Without the twisted inserts, the generator operated with a temperature difference of 22 to 28°C. The inserts provide significant reduction in the operating temperature of the solar collectors and do not adversely affect the performance of the double effect absorption chiller.


Author(s):  
Mamdouh El Haj Assad ◽  
Milad Sadeghzadeh ◽  
Mohammad Hossein Ahmadi ◽  
Mohammad Al‐Shabi ◽  
Mona Albawab ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. D. Rogdakis ◽  
V. D. Papaefthimiou

Abstract It is a general trend today, the old centrifugal machines to be replaced by new absorption machines. The mass flow rate of the cooling water in the centrifugal machines is normally 30% less than that in the two-stage absorption chiller for the same refrigerating capacity. Some absorption chillers manufacturers have updated and improved the double-effect technology increasing the cooling water temperature difference from the typical value of 5.5°C to 7.4°C and reducing the cooling water flow rate by about 30%. Using such a modern double effect absorption unit to replace a centrifugal chiller the same cooling water circuit can be used and the total cost of the retrofit is minimized. In this case a new flow pattern of the cooling tower is developed, and in this paper the design of a new tower fill is predicted taking into account the new factors characterizing the operating conditions and the required performance of the tower. As an example, the operational curves of a modified cooling tower (1500 KW cooling power) used by a 240 RT double-effect absorption chiller are presented.


Author(s):  
Emily Fricke ◽  
Vinod Narayanan

Abstract The food processing industry exists at the nexus between food, energy, and water systems. Improving the sustainability of this industry is critical to reduction of carbon emissions and enhanced utilization of vital resources such as water. The overarching aim of the present research is to create a process-based modeling platform for food processing systems that would allow the most appropriate combination of water-sustainable, energy-efficient, and renewable energy (WERE) technologies to be determined for a system. This paper focuses on one specific process in a thermal processing line: the cooling step after sterilization and prior to packaging. A typical process might use groundwater in a once-through loop. To reduce water use, two sustainable alternatives are considered and compared: (a) solar thermal coupled with an absorption chiller and (b) evaporative cooling of chilled water using a sub-wet bulb evaporative chiller (SWEC). The former uses a parabolic trough solar field with thermal storage that is connected to a single-effect water/lithium bromide (LiBr) chiller. The field and thermal storage are modeled using NREL’s System Advisor Model software and coupled to in-house Python code for the chiller and process heat exchanger. For the latter option, a novel SWEC is used as a chiller. The energy and water use, and capital cost of the two alternative technologies are presented.


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