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SECTION 5 COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION UNIT 24 EXPANSION DEVICES

Unit 24 Expansion Devices

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Page 1: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

SECTION 5

COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION

UNIT 24

EXPANSION DEVICES

Page 2: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

UNIT OBJECTIVES After studying this unit, the reader should be able to

• List and describe the three most popular expansion devices

• Explain the operating characteristics of various expansion valves

• Explain how various expansion devices respond to load changes

• Describe the operation of balanced port, dual port and electronic

expansion valves

• Explain how electronic controllers are used to control expansion

valves

Page 3: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

EXPANSION (METERING) DEVICES• Meters the correct amount of refrigerant to the

evaporator• Installed in the liquid line at the inlet of the

evaporator• Common devices: Automatic expansion valve,

thermostatic expansion valve, fixed bore (capillary tube)

• Less common devices: High-side float, low-side float

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Compressor Condenser

Metering deviceEvaporator

Direction of Refrigerant Flow

Page 5: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

THERMOSTATIC EXPANSION VALVE (TXV)

• Maintains a constant evaporator superheat• If the evaporator superheat is high, the valve

will open• Superheat ensures that no liquid refrigerant

leaves the evaporator• Low superheat increases the net refrigerant

effect

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Thermostatic Expansion Valve

Evaporator

Direction of Refrigerant Flow

Liquid Line

Transmission Line

Thermal Bulb

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TXV COMPONENTS

• Valve body

• Diaphragm

• Needle and seat

• Spring

• Adjustment and packing gland• Sensing bulb and transmission tube

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THE VALVE BODY• Machined brass or stainless steel• Holds components together• Provides means to connect valve to the piping

circuit• Fastened by flare, solder, or flange• Has an inlet screen to stop any small

particulate matter from entering valve

Page 9: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

THE DIAPHRAGM

• Moves the needle in and out of the seat in response to system load changes

• Flexes downward to open the valve

• Flexes upward to close the valve

• Made of thin, flexible stainless steel

• Located at the top of the valve

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Diaphragm

Bulb pressure pushes down to open the valve

Evaporator pressure pushes up to close the valve

Spring pressure pushes up to

close the valve

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NEEDLE AND SEAT• Control refrigerant flow through the valve

• Needle is pushed into the seat to reduce refrigerant flow to the evaporator

• Made of stainless steel

• The greater the pressure difference across the needle and seat, the greater the amount of flow through the valve

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Diaphragm

Seat

Needle

Push Rods

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Diaphragm pushed up

Needle pushed into the seat, closing the valve

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Diaphragm pushed down

Needle pushed out of the seat, opening the valve

Page 15: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

THE SPRING

• One of the valve’s closing forces

• Acts to push the needle into the seat, causing the valve to close

• Spring pressure determines the evaporator superheat

• Spring tension can be field adjusted

• Only EXPERIENCED field technicians should do adjustments on the valve

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The spring pushes up on the push rods to close the

valve

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THE SENSING BULB AND TRANSMISSION LINE

• Senses temperature at the outlet of the evaporator• This temperature is converted to a pressure and is

transmitted to the top of the diaphragm• The fluid in the bulb responds to a pressure /

temperature relationship • When the suction line temperature goes up, the bulb

pressure goes up • The bulb pressure is the only opening pressure that

controls the valve

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Liquid refrigerant from condenser or

receiver

Valve body

Saturated refrigerant to the evaporator

Superheat spring adjusting screw

Transmission Line Thermal Bulb

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TYPES OF BULB CHARGE

• Bulb charge is the type and amount of refrigerant contained in the thermal bulb transmission line and the space above the diaphragm– Liquid charge– Vapor charge– Cross liquid charge – Cross vapor charge

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THE LIQUID CHARGE BULB

• Bulb contains the same refrigerant as the refrigeration system

• Under all conditions, the bulb will ALWAYS contain some liquid

• The refrigerant in the bulb will always follow the pressure/temperature relationship of the system

Page 21: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

THE CROSS LIQUID CHARGE BULB

• Bulb contains a different refrigerant than the system

• Under all conditions, the bulb will ALWAYS contain some liquid

• The bulb does not follow the pressure/ temperature relationship of the system

• Valve closes during the compressor off cycle

Page 22: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

THE VAPOR CHARGE BULB

• Bulb contains the same refrigerant as the system

• Bulb only contains a small amount of liquid

• Also called a critical charge bulb

• At some predetermined temperature, all of the liquid in the bulb will boil until only vapor remains

• Any further increases in bulb temperature will have no effect on the bulb pressure

Page 23: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

THE CROSS VAPOR CHARGE BULB

• Bulb contains a different refrigerant than the system

• Bulb only contains a small amount of liquid

• Also called a critical charge bulb

• At some predetermined temperature, all of the liquid in the bulb will boil until only vapor remains

• Any further increases in bulb temperature will have no effect on the bulb pressure

Page 24: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

EXAMPLE OF A TXV WITH INTERNAL

EQUALIZER – LIQUID-FILLED BULB • Normal load conditions – medium temperature

application, R-134a, valve is in equilibrium

• Suction pressure 18.4 psig

• Suction line temperature 30°F, PBULB= 26.1 psig

• PSPRING + PEVAPORATOR = PBULB

• Spring pressure + 18.4 psig = 26.1 psig

• Spring pressure = 7.7 psig

Page 25: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

R-134a

Evaporator pressure 18.4 psig

26.1 psig30°F

Spring pressure = ?

26.1 psig = Ps + 18.4 psig

Ps = 7.7 psig

Page 26: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

LOAD CHANGES WITH FOOD ADDED TO COOLER

• Addition of warm food increases evaporator load

• Refrigerant boils faster and suction pressure rises

• Evaporator superheat rises

• Valve opens to feed more refrigerant to the evaporator

• Increased evaporator superheat causes temperature of remote bulb to rise

Page 27: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

LOAD CHANGES WITH FOOD REMOVED FROM THE COOLER

• Removal of food reduces load on the evaporator

• Refrigerant boils slower and suction pressure drops

• Evaporator superheat drops

• Valve closes to feed less refrigerant to the evaporator

Page 28: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

TXV WITH EXTERNAL EQUALIZER

• Used if an evaporator has more than a 2.5 psig drop from inlet to outlet

• The evaporator pressure is sensed at the outlet of the coil instead of the inlet

• Used to prevent the coil from starving• Connected to the evaporator outlet after the thermal

bulb • Used to compensate for pressure drop in the

evaporator

Page 29: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

Saturated refrigerant to the evaporator

Liquid refrigerant to the expansion valve

External equalizer line connected to the outlet of the evaporator coil

Evaporator pressure pushing up on the diaphragm

Diaphragm

Solid brass divider

Page 30: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

TXV RESPONSES TO LOAD CHANGES

• When load increases– Refrigerant boils faster and the suction line temperature

increases– Valve opens to feed more refrigerant to the evaporator

• When load decreases– Refrigerant takes longer to boil– Valve closes to feed less refrigerant to the evaporator

Page 31: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

BALANCED PORT TXV

• Designed to operate in low ambient conditions

• Used if any of the following conditions exist

- Large varying head pressures

- Large varying pressure drops across the TXV

- Widely varying evaporator loads

- Very low liquid line temperatures

• Have larger-than-normal orifices

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DUAL PORT TXV• Used when systems need a larger TXV for short

periods of time• Dual-port valves have two independent

capacities- Larger port for periods of high load- Smaller port for periods of normal load- TXV capacity is doubled when larger port is open all the way

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PRESSURE LIMITING TXV

• Allows evaporator pressure to only reach a predetermined pressure

• If the evaporator pressure exceeds this pressure, the valve will close

• Desirable on low-temperature applications

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SENSING ELEMENT (BULB) INSTALLATION

• Bulb should be mounted on the suction line as close to the evaporator as possible

• Suction line should be clean and straight

• Bulb should be mounted securely

• Follow manufacturer’s instructions

• For small suction lines, the bulb is usually secured to the top of the line

Page 35: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

Suction line smaller than 3/4”

Thermal bulb mounted on top of the line

Suction line larger than 3/4”

Thermal bulb located 45° below horizontal

Use strapping material supplied with the valve to hold bulb securely to the suction line

Page 36: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

THE SOLID-STATE CONTROLLED EXPANSION VALVE

• Uses a thermistor as a sensing element

• Electrically controlled

• When coil is energized, the valve opens

• Responds very quickly to temperature changes

• Suitable for heat pump applications

Page 37: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

STEP MOTOR EXPANSION VALVES

• Uses a small motor to control the valve port

• Valve port controls evaporator superheat

• Temperature sensor sends a signal to the controller

• The controller sends a signal to the motor

• The motor turns a fraction of a rotation for each controller signal

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ALGORITHMS AND PID CONTROLLERS • Proportional Controllers

- Generate an analog output signal- Difference between actual superheat and superheat set point is the “offset” or “error”

• Integral Controller Modes - Helps reduce the “error” or “offset”- Calculates error size and the length of time the error exists

• Derivative Controller Modes - Estimate rate of change of temperature/time curve

Page 39: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

AUTOMATIC EXPANSION VALVE • Maintains constant pressure in the evaporator• When the evaporator pressure drops, the valve

opens• The spring pressure pushes to open the valve • The evaporator pressure pushes to close the

valve• Turning the adjustment screw into the valve

increases the spring pressure

Page 40: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

Diaphragm

Spring pressure pushes down to open the valve

Evaporator pressure pushes up to close the valve

Two pressures control the automatic

expansion valve

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Diaphragm pushed up

Needle pushed into the seat, closing the valve

Caused by an increase in evaporator pressure

Page 42: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

Diaphragm pushed down

Needle pushed out of the seat, opening the valve

Caused by a decrease in evaporator pressure

Page 43: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

Diaphragm

Needle and Seat

Spring

Liquid refrigerant from condenser or receiver

Saturated refrigerant to the evaporator

Evaporator pressure

Spring pressure

Page 44: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

AUTOMATIC EXPANSION VALVE RESPONSE TO LOAD CHANGES

• Responds in reverse to load changes

• If the load increases– Refrigerant boils faster in the evaporator– The evaporator pressure increases– The valve closes

• Used where the load is fairly constant

Page 45: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

THE CAPILLARY TUBE METERING DEVICE

• Controls refrigerant flow by the pressure drop across it

• Diameter and length of the tube determine flow at a given pressure

• Does not maintain evaporator pressure or superheat

• Used when the load is relatively constant• No moving parts to wear out

Page 46: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

OPERATING CHARGE FOR THE CAPILLARY TUBE SYSTEM

• Capillary tube systems are critically charged

• All refrigerant in the system circulates at all times when the system is running

• Capillary tube sometimes fastened to the suction line for heat exchange

• Responds very slowly to system load changes

Page 47: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

UNIT SUMMARY - 1• Expansion devices meter the correct amount of

refrigerant to the evaporator according to system operating conditions

• Common expansion valves include the capillary tube, automatic expansion valve and the thermostatic expansion valve

• The thermostatic expansion valve is designed to maintain constant superheat in the evaporator

Page 48: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

UNIT SUMMARY - 2• Three pressures control the operation of the TXV:

the bulb pressure, the spring pressure and the evaporator pressure

• Thermal bulb can be liquid-charged, vapor-charged, cross liquid-charged, or cross vapor-charged

• Internally equalized TXVs get the evaporator pressure from the inlet of the coil, while externally equalized TXVs get the evaporator pressure from the outlet of the coil

Page 49: Unit 24 Expansion Devices

UNIT SUMMARY - 3• Special TXVs include the balanced port TXV, the

dual port TXV and the electronic TXV• The automatic expansion valve maintains a constant

evaporator pressure• Two pressure control the AXV: the spring pressure

and the evaporator pressure• The capillary tube is a fixed bore metering device • The capillary tube meters refrigerant depending on

the pressure drop across the tube