HVAC Made Easy - Selection Tips For Chiller Compressors PDF
HVAC Made Easy - Selection Tips For Chiller Compressors PDF
HVAC Made Easy - Selection Tips For Chiller Compressors PDF
2012
The biggest drawback of centrifugal machine is a very poor part load performance and
inability to operate at low cooling loads. At extreme low loads, these chillers are prone to
a condition known as surging.
The main limitation is that these are not suitable for air-cooled condenser options and
require water and cooling tower.
Screw Chillers
Rotary or screw chillers, like reciprocating machines are positive displacement
compressors. Rotary is a wider term that may include vane, eccentric, gear or screw
types. The commercial refrigeration installation rely more on screw machines. Screw
compressors are available in several designs, both single screw and twin screw, with oilfree and oil-injected designs in both types. Twin-screw oil-injected compressors are
slightly more energy efficient at moderate compression ratios. Twin-screw compressors
have an ability to operate at compression ratio of 30. Units are available in both hermetic
sealed and open construction.
The capacity control in screw compressor is achieved thorough a moveable slide stop
valve, which will vary the compressor internal volume ratio to achieve optimum energy
consumption during part load operation.
Screw chillers are available in capacities ranging from 20 to 1000 tons and even higher
from few manufacturers.
The factors favoring screw chillers is their compact size, lightweight, quite & vibration free
operation and high energy efficiency both in full and part load operation.
The major drawback is their high cost. For smaller loads, reciprocating machines are less
expensive to purchase and for large loads centrifugal machines cost less.
Scroll Chillers
Scroll compressors have been used in commercial practice for systems that have
capacity less than 30 TR. On such small sizes, these do not affect the life cycle
economics drastically and therefore not discussed further.
Reciprocating
0.85
Centrifugal
0.70 for units < 150
TR
Screw
0.79 for units <
150 TR
Operating costs at part load efficiency: Efficiency at part load operation is very
important aspect of analysis. Overall economics on life cycle basis demand much more
than the peak loading. One must look at how those loads vary on a daily and seasonal
basis. Remember, a typical chiller operates less than peak loading more than 90% of the
time.
The screw compressor offer infinite reduction from 100% to 0%, that allows
obtaining higher refrigeration capacity from the same machine and affords good
part load efficiency.
The centrifugal machine accomplishes the capacity reduction in stages. When
building load decreases, the chiller responds by partially closing its inlet vanes to
restrict refrigerant flow. While this control method is effective down to about 20%
of chillers rated output, it results in decreased operating efficiency. For example
a chiller rated at 0.6 kW per ton at full load might require as much as 0.9 kW per
ton when lightly loaded. Since chillers typically operate at or near full load less
than 10 percent of time, part load operating characteristics significantly impact
annual energy requirements.
The reciprocating compressors stepped capacity control is most efficient at
minimum load than the twin-screw compressor.
The above is true for centrifugal compressor but may pose significant problems if
rotor is failed. Centrifugal rotors are one of a kind and are not standard
equipment or a stock item that will fit in a similar unit in the field.
Most reciprocating compressors are field serviceable but it is tedious due to large
number of parts.
Oil Lubrication: The screw compressor has a considerable amount of oil pumped
through it at all times and therefore it can absorb liquid slugs in large quantities. Large
quantities of liquids during upset conditions can destroy reciprocating compressors but
the centrifugal compressors are most susceptible to water. Even small quantities of
liquids shall have detrimental effect on centrifugal compressor rotors. In screw
compressor, oil is injected into the rotor chamber for sealing and lubrication purposes and
is removed in an oil separator. In reciprocating compressors lubricating oil is allowed to
circulate with the refrigerant, this avoids the necessity for fitting an oil separator.
Centrifugal machines are oil free dry units.
The controllers offer the programmable set points, lead/lag scheduling, optimal
start control, compressor soft loading, demand limit control etc as standard
features.
Phase failure/reversal protection, high return water unloading, acoustical
enclosures around the compressor are factory installed optional features that are
available at extra cost.
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Air-conditioning systems consume high energy. The part load efficiency is very
critical to minimize the overall energy costs. The problems with centrifugal machine
having low part load efficiency and inability to operate during low load to a great
extent have been eliminated through the provision of variable frequency drive
(VFD). As the cooling load decreases, the VFD decreases its output voltage/
frequency, slowing chiller. The result the chiller operates at near full load efficiency
for almost the entire operating range. The VFD units allow the chiller to operate as
low as 10% of rated output without experiencing surging.
Gas driven centrifugal machines are an alternative to electric driven chillers in
areas where demand charges are high and natural gas rates are low. The
gas/turbine driven machines tend to be more than twice as expensive as the
electrical driven machines of equivalent capacity. The use of gas/turbine driven
machines is recommended for remote locations where either the electric power
unavailable or where the high capacity chiller machines, typically above 750 HP
demand expensive electrical distribution network, switchgear and transformers.
In large centrifugal machines, the expansion valve is replaced with 2-phase turbine.
With expansion valves, the energy potential available across the expansion valve
due to the high-pressure differential is lost. By replacing the valve with a turbine,
some of the energy can be recovered and used to help drive the chiller compressor,
reducing energy the motor must supply.
New chillers are larger than the ones they are replacing, even though no change in
capacity. Efficiency improvements are primarily the result of: Larger heat
exchangers redesigned refrigerant flow aerodynamics and more efficient motor
designs. All of these impact the chiller size. With mechanical rooms historically
undersized, they simply may not be enough room to install the new, larger chiller.
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Acronyms:
EER stands for energy efficiency ratio. This represents cooling capacity in Btu/hr divided
by power input in watts at a standard conditions specified by American Refrigeration
Institute, ARI. EER for refrigeration machine is always above 1.
CFC stands for chloro fluoro carbon compounds. HCFC stands for hydro chloro fluoro
carbon compounds. These are the category of refrigerant compounds that are considered
major source of ozone layer depletion. CFC has been phased out completely and HCFCs
are permitted to use on running machines until year 2020. HCFCs are responsible for
ozone layer depletion to certain extent.
Peak load demand determines the overall capacity of the system. The total chiller
capacity in tons of refrigeration shall match or exceed the peak building load.
Part load requirements determine the number and size of chillers required.
Cooling load profile will help to determine the type of chiller to use and if single or
multiple chillers should be installed. Multiple chiller installations allow facilities
professionals to stage their operation to match building loads while keeping the
chillers operating at energy efficient loading. With high capacity centrifugal
chillers part load application should not be less than 20 to 35% of the full load
capacity. If the part load requirement is less than this amount, a reduced capacity
chiller should be selected.
Essential service requirements determine the system reliability requirements. Say
in a hospital, the Operation Theater or infectious area call for controlled
environment all the time. Therefore the selection of chiller should take into
account a dedicated chiller capacity to meet the essential loads.
The places where the price differential between the electricity and natural gas is
high, gas driven centrifugal chillers or absorption chillers could be considered. In
some development sites, it may involve huge cost to set up an infrastructure of
say 6.6 or 11kV for large chiller capacities or to bring energy to the remote site.
The places where water is scarce, the chiller machines should be selected for aircooled condensers. Centrifugal chiller is not a choice for air-cooled
configurations.
Materials (Refrigerant): Use environment- preferred products that shall be available for
the life cycle of the plant for instance a non-CFC type refrigerant should be used.
All the above chiller machines are available with non-CFC refrigerant options but the new
generation scroll and screw machines have been specifically developed for use with R134a refrigerant, which is a most popular refrigerant today.
To date, the reciprocating compressors available have been converted to R-134a use
from original R-22 designs. No authentic data is available on the capacity derating/enhanced performance of reciprocating machine with R-134a refrigerant. This
should be investigated, should a reciprocating chiller machine be considered.
Microclimate conditions: High humidity, tropic climatic conditions would favor the
selection of air cooled chillers. Centrifugal chillers require cooling tower and make up
water. These may not be a good choice in the humid and tropic regions.
Siting: Environmental planning constraints on the proposed plant location need to be
considered. The need to minimize noise emission in residential area during out of office
hours would go against the air-cooled system option. All the three machines are suitable
for water-cooled configurations. As far as noise from the equipment is concerned, screw
compressors are the quietest.
System maintenance and serviceability considerations: The facilities professionals
must take into consideration the maintenance requirements of different types of chillers.
The following must be noted:
Use technologies that are reliable, can stand long hours of continuous operation,
minimum downtime and requires minimal maintenance
Must consider the level of service and support that can be provided by the
manufacturer in that location.
In general reciprocating chiller requires more routine maintenance than centrifugal; and
centrifugal chiller require tedious service than the rotary chillers
Physical Attributes: To a great extent space availability will dictate the type of chiller to
be installed.
The area and space requirements for chiller package must be examined. If space
is tight, the rotary chiller might be the best solution.
For a complete package, decision for air-cooled v/s water-cooled chiller package
should be evaluated. In addition to availability of quality water concerns, it should
be noted that space requirement for the cooling tower is roughly 25% the area
needed by the air-cooled system on large installation.
If the space is adjacent to an area where noise is a major concern, reciprocating
chillers are not the best option. Even the high-pitched whine of centrifugal
compressor can be a serious problem. Rotary chiller is a best choice.
Capital costs: The capital costs must include the total cost of the complete
installation that accounts for the building cost, associated electric power supply
reticulation and control costs
Operating costs: Check energy costs, water treatment costs, maintenance etc.
Programmed maintenance and servicing costs.