Window and
Split-system AC Units
A
window air conditioner unit implements a complete air conditioner in a small
space. The units are made small enough to fit into a standard window frame. You
close the window down on the unit, plug it in and turn it on to get cool air.
If you take the cover off of an unplugged window unit, you'll find that it
contains:
·
A compressor
·
An expansion valve
·
A hot coil (on the outside)
·
A chilled coil (on the inside)
·
Two fans
·
A control unit
The
fans blow air over the coils to improve their ability to dissipate heat (to the
outside air) and cold (to the room being cooled).
When
you get into larger air-conditioning applications, its time to start looking at
split-system units. A split-system air conditioner splits the hot side from the
cold side of the system, as in the diagram below.
The
cold side, consisting of the expansion valve and the cold coil, is generally
placed into a furnace or
some other air handler. The air handler blows air through the coil and routes
the air throughout the building using a series of ducts. The hot side, known as
the condensing unit, lives outside the building.
The
unit consists of a long, spiral coil shaped like a cylinder. Inside the coil is
a fan, to blow air through the coil, along with a weather-resistant
compressor and some control logic. This approach has evolved over the years
because it's low-cost, and also because it normally results in reduced noise
inside the house (at the expense of increased noise outside the house). Other
than the fact that the hot and cold sides are split apart and the capacity is
higher (making the coils and compressor larger), there's no difference between
a split-system and a window air conditioner.
In
warehouses, large business offices, malls, big department stores and other
sizeable buildings, the condensing unit normally lives on the roof and can be
quite massive. Alternatively, there may be many smaller units on the roof, each
attached inside to a small air handler that cools a specific zone in the
building.
In
larger buildings and particularly in multi-story buildings, the split-system
approach begins to run into problems. Either running the pipe between the
condenser and the air handler exceeds distance limitations (runs that are too
long start to cause lubrication difficulties in the compressor), or the amount
of duct work and the length of ducts becomes unmanageable. At this point, it's
time to think about a chilled-water system.
www.bilkargroup.com
www.bilkarsogutma.com.tr
info@bilkargroup.com
+90 212 343 50 40
+90 553 343 50 40

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