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Thermodynamic modeling of absorption chiller and comparison with experiments

Authors: Ng, K.C. Chua, H.T. Han, Q. (National Univ. of Singapore (Singapore). Dept. of Mechanical and Production Engineering) Kashiwagi, T. Akisawa, A. Tsurusawa, T. (Tokyo Univ. of Agriculture and Technology (Japan). Dept. of Mechanical Systems Engineering)
 
Abstract: A simple and accurate thermodynamic model is presented for a four-heat-reservoir, absorption chiller. The performance of chillers, as described by I/COP, is expressed in terms of the dominant external and internal losses that stem from the finite-rate heat transfer and internal entropy generation in the absorber, condenser, generator, and evaporator. It is found that the relative contributions from these losses of absorption chillers govern their behavior over a wide range of cooling capacities. The successful formulation of the thermodynamic model, as presented in this article, implies that all previous endoreversible approaches are inadequate because they cannot portray the real behavior of absorption chillers accurately. At best, these models give only the upper bounds of experimental realities and thus they can be viewed only as subsets of the generic thermodynamic approach described here. The authors present evidence from an experimental facility to show that true absorption chiller behavior is governed by the presence of three key competing losses, namely, the finite-rate heat transfer losses, the internal dissipative losses, and heat leaks.
Publication Date: 01 Apr 1999
Resource Type: Journal Article
Resource Relation: Heat Transfer Engineering; Vol/Issue: 20:2
Country of Publication: United States
Language: English
Keywords relating to this report:
-- ENERGY CONSERVATION, CONSUMPTION, &
-- ENERGY CONSERVATION, CONSUMPTION, &
ABSORPTION REFRIGERATION CYCLE
AGRICULTURAL PROCESSES-- EQUIPMENT &
ENERGY LOSSES
PROCESSES
REFRIGERATING MACHINERY
THERMODYNAMIC MODEL
UTILIZATION-- BUILDING EQUIPMENT-- (1987-)
UTILIZATION-- INDUSTRIAL &
Related subjects:
EQUIPMENT
LOSSES
MACHINERY
MATHEMATICAL MODELS
PARTICLE MODELS
STATISTICAL MODELS