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Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

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Page 1: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Refrigeration and CryogenicsMaciej Chorowski

Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Page 2: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering
Page 3: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Refrigeration - definition

Page 4: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Refrigeration systems

Page 5: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Refrigerant

Page 6: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Chemical structure of refrigerants

Page 7: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Refrigerant R12, CF2Cl2

Page 8: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Demanded properties of refrigerants• Today the

preservation of the ozone layer is the first priority of refrigeration selection

Page 9: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Why do we need ozone in the atmosphere• The atmosphere surrounding the earth contains small

quantities of ozone - a gas with molecules consisting of three oxygen atoms (O3). If all the ozone in the atmosphere were compressed to a pressure corresponding to that at the earth's surface, the layer would be only 3 mm thick.

• But even though ozone occurs in such small quantities, it plays an exceptionally fundamental part in life on earth. This is because ozone, together with ordinary molecular oxygen (O2), is able to absorb the major part of the sun's ultraviolet radiation and therefore prevent this dangerous radiation from reaching the surface.

• Without a protective ozone layer in the atmosphere, animals and plants could not exist, at least upon land. It is therefore of the greatest importance to understand the processes that regulate the atmosphere's ozone content.

Page 10: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

How does the ozone protect us against uv?

• Ozone is formed in the atmosphere through the splitting of ordinary oxygen molecules (O2) by ultra-violet radiation from the sun. The oxygen atoms thereby liberated react with the molecular oxygen. The ozone that is formed in this process is also dissociated by solar radiation to form an oxygen atom and an oxygen molecule. This cyclic process leads to a natural steady-state concentration of stratospheric ozone. These three reactions are called the "Chapman cycle" :

O2+ uv-light -> 2OO+O2+M -> O3+MO3 + uv-light -> O2 + O

where M is a random air molecule (N2 or O2).

Page 11: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

How is the ozone depleted by CFC’s

Stratospheric Ozone Depletion by CFC’s (Catalytic Cycle):

Net Reaction:   2 O3 -> 3 O2

Page 12: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

How is the ozone depleted by CFC’s

Page 13: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1995

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 1995 Nobel Prize in Chemistry to Paul Crutzen, Mario Molina and F. Sherwood Rowland for their work in atmospheric chemistry, particularly concerning the formation and decomposition of ozone.

Page 14: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Ozone Depletion Potential (ODP)

Page 15: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Pressure-enthalpy diagram

Page 16: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

CARNOT vapor cycle

Page 17: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

CARNOT CYCLE

Page 18: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Single stage vapour compression cycle

Page 19: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Single stage vapour compression cycle

Page 20: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Vapour compression cycle

Page 21: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering

Refrigeration – basic definitions

Page 22: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering
Page 23: Refrigeration and Cryogenics Maciej Chorowski Faculty of Mechanical and Power Engineering