Absorption cooling, adsorption cooling and steamed potato.
This page is aimed at the novice,
it may be pretty boring to others.. I have no formal qualifications in
refrigeration, physics or tea making. The following information could be
inaccurate or just plain wrong.
*To save space I'll mainly use the term absorption and absorber
even though sometimes this could also be adsorption and adsorber*
There are two main types of absorption cooling cycle. One is a continuous
cycle where heat can be applied continuously and the cold part of the system
always stays cold. This is the cycle used in gas/kero fridges. The other
system is an intermittent cycle where there are two distinct phases. There
is a generation phase where the generator (which is the absorber later)
is heated and the receiver( which is the evaporator later) is at close
to ambient temperature and a cooling phase where the absorber is near ambient
and the evaporator is cold. Each system has its positives and negative.
So how does an absorption fridge work? First some basic
kitchen physics.
After a long day of kitchen table top experiments, Dave and I need
a tea break to sit down and figure out why is it - that in theory absorption
fridges are simple but in practice they're not. Why, in theory - theory
and practice are the same but in practice they're not - and other deep
stuff like that.
So I put some water in the kettle and put it on the stove and turn it on.
If we were to measure the temperature of the water, we would notice a steady
rise in temperature until the water started to boil, after that - the temperature
would stay the same (assuming the water is pure and some other parameters
are constant). Before the water boils the energy (heat) from the stove
raises the temperature (sensible heat), once water boils the energy goes
into changing the phase of the water from liquid to gas (latent heat).
If I forget to turn to heat off, the water will stay at the same temperature
until all of it has changed to steam. The steam at the surface will be
the same temperature as the water. If the pressure in the kettle is one
standard atmosphere the water will boil at 100 deg C, if the pressure is
higher - so is the boiling point, likewise if the pressure is lower - so
is the boiling point.
There is an other way to boil the water, one which is not useful for making
tea but is useful for refrigeration. We can boil water by lowering the
pressure until the boiling point is lower than room temperature. Then the
water will boil and absorbs heat from its surroundings, ie. it becomes
cold. This type of heat absorption is the basis for most refrigeration
systems. If we lower the pressure enough the water will cool itself down
to freezing point and simulatously boil and freeze. This happens at around
one two hundredth of an atmosphere. Other liquids have similar behavior
but at different temperatures and pressures, and many can remain as liquids
below 0 deg C, this is essential if we want to build a freezer.
Kitchen physics is hungry as well as thirsty work. So after making a clear
space amongst the debris, I chop some vegies and put them in a steamer.
Some water goes into the bottom and I heat it to boiling point, the boiling
water absorbs energy from the stove, the steam condenses on the surfaces
of the pot and food, in condensing it releases the energy (latent heat)
and heats all the surfaces to 100 deg C. Excess water runs back the bottom.
All the air is displaced by steam and heat continues to be moved from the
bottom of the pot to the contents by the phase changes in the water - from
water to steam and back again. If, assuming all the air and other gasses
had been expelled ,we now seal the pot with a gas tight seal (and the pot
is strong enough). Now the normal boiling point is no longer relevant.
The steam will continue to transport heat from the bottom to the contents
at wide range of temperatures, we have constructed a heat pipe. Ok lets
forget about food for a while and just consider a simpler heat pipe - say
a piece of vertical tube sealed with water in the bottom and all the air
removed. Most people should be able to visualize that heating the bottom
will cause the water to boil and the steam condensing at the top will heat
it. What may be more difficult is visualizing that cooling the top will
also cool the bottom. If we cool the top steam will condense lowering the
pressure inside the tube such that the water at the bottom will boil until
it has cooled down to match the temperature at the top. We now know how
to move heat around using latent heat, next we will make a heat pump.
Before we talk about absorption let's talk about a simple
compressor fridge.
In the above text I've explained how we can cool water by boiling
in at low pressure, we've also seen how we can heat things by condensing
vapor into liquid. So let's make a simple cooler to keep the milk for the
tea fresh. Let's make a small thermally insulated box and inside it place
a flask of water (the evaporator) with a pipe running from the top of the
flask to a pump outside the box.. We run the pump, lower pressure, boil
the water and lower the temperature. We might call this an intermittent
compressor fridge because we need to stop it once in a while to refill
the water.
Since
this is a hassle we fit another container (condenser) to the outlet from
the pump and condense the steam back into water, this container will become
hotter due to the latent heat of the condensation. The condenser is at
a higher pressure than the evaporator. We now have a heat pump of sorts.
Finally we run a pipe back into the evaporator via a valve which maintains
a pressure difference between the evaporator and condenser, this might
just be a narrow tube. Now we have a continuous cycle, this is how most
fridges work. Usually the refrigerant won't be water and the pressures
in the system will be much higher. The containers will usually be tubes
to improve heat flow but the principle is the same.
And now what you came here for, the absorption stuff.
To
build an intermittent cycle fridge we don't
have to use a mechanical pump to lower the pressure in the evaporator.
Just say we had something that absorbed the water vapor, some chemical
with a hunger for water that would grab enough water molecules the keep
the vapor pressure low enough to allow the water to boil at low temperatures.
Such chemicals exist, one of them is a salt called Lithium Bromide(LiBr).
If we replace the pump and condenser with a container of LiBr and remove
the air - presto we have absorption cooling (in theory anyway). This cooling
phase is the evaporation/absorption part of the cycle. The system would
continue to cool till either we run out of water or the LiBr has absorbed
all the water it can. What now? We remove the contraption from the box
and heat the LiBr, it changes from being an absorber to being a generator.
We cool (as best we can) what was the evaporator and it becomes the condenser/receiver.
This cooling may just be exposure to room temperature air or a dip into
cool water. During this part of the cycle water is released by the LiBr
and condenses back into the receiver ready for another cooling cycle. If
we can heat the LiBr enough we can remove all the water, but at lower generator
temperatures we must be content with only removing some of the water. Note
that the pressure is governed by the receiver temperature. At the generator
temperatures we can expect from a passive solar collector, we might only
change the concentration of the LiBr solution by 5% to 10 %. Unfortunately
LiBr is too expensive to build a practical intermittent system and as it
uses water as the refrigerant it can't be used to make a freezer, also
the working pressures are very low and hard to maintain. intermittent cycle
absorption fridges need far more absorber and refrigerant than continuous
cycle ones. For a more practical cycle see the icyball
patent. This uses an ammonia/water cycle, ammonia is the refrigerant
and water the absorber, the system works at much higher pressures. Also
see - Solar Powered
Refrigeration by means of an Ammonia/water Intermittent Absorption Cycle.
There are more complicated intermittent cycle systems, for example we might
spilt the receiver into two allowing the condensation to occurs outside
of the fridge and the evaporation to occurs inside. One might also build
a pseudo continuous cycle by using multiple generator/absorbers. This could
be useful in an adsorption system where the adsorber is a solid and unsuitable
for a continuous cycle.
Now let look at doing a continuous cycle absorption
fridge.
In the continuous cycle fridge we discussed above we used a mechanical
pump to maintain a pressure difference across a pressure reducing valve
with the aim of boiling a liquid as it passed from the high pressure to
low pressure parts of the system, we want to do something similar now using
absorption techniques. We arrange two containers of LiBr/water solution
so that the solution can circulate between to two, probably using a pair
of tubes. We heat one container (the generator) and it generates gas (water
vapour) - raising the pressure in the container with respect to the cold
one. In the process the solution becomes more concentrated. The pressure
increase will also force some solution across to the other container causing
a difference in the liquid levels. We can run a pipe from the top of the
generator taking the hot gas into a condenser to liquify it. The liquid
then passes through a pressure reducing valve and boils in the low pressure
side of the system. This gives us the desired cooling effect. The low pressure
gas then travels into the cooler container (absorber) where it is absorbed
by the LiBr solution. The LiBr is circulated from one container to the
other, absorbing gas on the cool side and releasing it on the hot side.
The transfer of heat from one container to the other by the LiBr solution
is undesirable and can be reduced with the addition of a counter flow heat
exchanger. A heat exchanger between the warm water entering the evaporator
and the cold gas leaving it may also improve efficiency.
The diagrams above are simplified and may look nothing like a real fridge.
A real fridge would probably use tubes and fins in many places. The size
of the various parts could vary considerably along with their shape and
placement. I hope this has been useful just the same.
Absorber/refrigerant pairs.
There a zillions of possible absorber/refrigerant pairs, many are still
untested (or undiscovered) - none that I know of are perfect. The perfect
pair would be cheap, nontoxic, non corrosive, environmentally safe, have
a convenient working pressure, low absorber specific heat, high refrigerant
latent heat and so forth. A continuous cycle requires a liquid absorber,
an intermittent cycle can use either a liquid absorber or a solid adsorber.
The working pressure is governed by the refrigerant, the pressure will
be what ever is required to make the refrigerant boil at the desired evaporator
temperature and will be higher in the generation phase for intermittent
cycle or in the generator in a continuous cycle. The ideal working pressure
is probably lightly above atmospheric pressure. This is because a slight
leak of refrigerant out of the system will degrade performance less than
a leak of air into the system.
Some working pairs include, Ammonia/water, Ammonia/Calcium chloride(solid),
Lithium bromide/water, Zeolite/water and Activated charcoal/methanol.
- Water makes a poor refrigerant where low temperatures are required.
You obviously can't make a freezer using it because the refrigerant will
freeze before your ice-cream does. Even at slightly higher temperature
(say 4C) its vapour pressure is still very low. However it may be suitable
for air-conditioners but even here the low pressure can be a problem. Well
at least its cheap!
- Ammonia works at much higher pressures around 5-12 atm, this has its
problems too. When used in a continuous cycle, you get a big pressure difference
between the absorber and generator, this requires a pump to make it work.
However adding hydrogen as a "capping gas" fixes this problem
, I think this means you have a mixture of hydrogen and ammonia in what
is labelled "low pressure vapour" in fig 4. The reactions are
based on the partial pressures of ammonia not the total pressure of the
mixture - so we can increase the total pressure to reduce the liquid level
difference between the generator and absorber so that a pump is no longer
needed. When Ammonia/water is used as a generator - water is released with
the ammonia. This degrades performance and requires that intermittent systems
be "reset" often by pouring the excess water back where it belongs.
Ammonia is poisonous and corrosive.
- Methanol, higher pressures than water but still pretty low, a low latent
heat, toxic, inflamible (explosive?), often contaminated with water. It
is unstable at high temperatures when catalysts are present.
Calcium chloride when adsorbing ammonia increases its volume about four
fold. The CaCl has to be processed into granules so the ammonia (gas) can
penetrate.
- Lithium bromides main vice is that its very expensive.
- Activated charcoal is a better thermal insulator than we would like.
It may also already contain trapped chemicals you have to get rid of before
you can use it.
Is it worth while?
Comparing absorption and electric (compressor based) fridges is not
a simple matter. In my opinion the photo-voltaic (PV) electric fridge is
better in most remote power situations. While the absorption fridge is
simple in concept one must consider things like backup systems for cloudy
days (eg. gas boost), reliability, portability and so on. The niches for
solar absorption may include :-
1 - Developing countries that don't have the capital to import PV panels.
2 - Alternated lifestyle people who like to tinker.
3 - Large scale cooling where scaling factors may favour solar absorption
systems.
and so forth.
One should note that an efficient PV electric fridge is unlikely to look
like a normal domestic fridge. It would probably be a top opening chest
with motor, compressor and condenser move away from the cold box - possibly
outside the house. It should (in my humble opinion) use ice storage for
overnight cooling and not batteries.
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