Air-conditioning
Basics
Air
conditioners use refrigeration to chill indoor air, taking advantage of a
remarkable physical law: When a liquid converts
to a gas (in
a process called phase conversion), it absorbs heat. Air
conditioners exploit this feature of phase conversion by forcing special
chemical compounds to evaporate and condense over and over again in a closed
system of coils.
The
compounds involved are refrigerants that have properties
enabling them to change at relatively low temperatures. Air conditioners also
contain fans that move warm interior air over these cold, refrigerant-filled
coils. In fact, central air conditioners have a whole system of ducts designed
to funnel air to and from these serpentine, air-chilling coils.
When
hot air flows over the cold, low-pressure evaporator coils, the
refrigerant inside absorbs heat as it changes from a liquid to a gaseous state.
To keep cooling efficiently, the air conditioner has to convert the refrigerant
gas back to a liquid again. To do that, a compressor puts the gas under high
pressure, a process that creates unwanted heat. All the extra heat created by
compressing the gas is then evacuated to the outdoors with the help of a second
set of coils called condenser coils, and a second fan. As the gas
cools, it changes back to a liquid, and the process starts all over again.
Think of it as an endless, elegant cycle: liquid refrigerant, phase conversion
to a gas/ heat absorption, compression and phase transition back to a liquid
again.
It's
easy to see that there are two distinct things going on in an air conditioner.
Refrigerant is chilling the indoor air, and the resulting gas is being
continually compressed and cooled for conversion back to a liquid again. On the
next page, we'll look at how the different parts of an air conditioner work to
make all that possible.
www.bilkargroup.com
www.bilkarsogutma.com.tr
info@bilkargroup.com
+90 212 343 50 40
+90 553 343 50 40

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