This paper reports the results of an experimental investigation on a pilot compression chiller (4 kW cooling capacity) working with R401a and R134a as R12 alternatives. Experiments are conducted on a single-stage vapor compression refrigeration system using water as a secondary working fluid through both evaporator and condenser. Influences of cooling water mass flow rate (170–1900 kg/h), cooling water inlet temperature (27–43°C) and chilled water mass flow rate (240–1150 kg/h) on performance characteristics of chillers are evaluated for R401a, R134a and R12. Increasing cooling water mass flow rate or decreasing its inlet temperature causes the operating pressures and electric input power to reduce while the cooling capacity and coefficient of performance (COP) to increase. Pressure ratio is inversely proportional while actual loads and COP are directly proportional to chilled water mass flow rate. The effect of cooling water inlet temperature, on the system performance, is more significant than the effects of cooling and chilled water mass flow rates. Comparison between R12, R134a and R401a under identical operating conditions revealed that R401a can be used as a drop-in refrigerant to replace R12 in water-cooled chillers.

1.
Stiemle, F., 1996, “Development in air-conditioning,” Proc. of IIF-IIR Conference (Commissions B1, B2, E1 and E2), Bucharest, Romania, pp. 190–194.
2.
Ng
K. C.
,
Chua
H. T.
,
Ong
W.
,
Lee
S. S.
, and
Gordon
J. M.
,
1997
, “
Diagnostics and optimization of reciprocating chillers: theory and experiment
,”
Applied Thermal Engineering
,
17
, pp.
263
276
.
3.
ASHRAE, 2000, “HVAC System and Equipment Handbook,” American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
4.
Swider
D. J.
,
Browne
M. W.
,
Bansal
P. K.
, and
Kecman
V.
,
2001
, “
Modeling of vapor-compression liquid chillers with neural networks
,”
Applied Thermal Engineering
,
21
, pp.
311
329
.
5.
Toth
S. J.
,
1994
, “
Air conditioning with ammonia for district cooling
,”
ASHRAE Trans.
,
100
, pp.
1117
1125
.
6.
Abu-Abdou
K. M. K.
,
1994
, “
Performance comparison between alternative and phased-out refrigerants
,”
Int. J. of Ambient Energy
,
15
, pp.
185
194
.
7.
Maclaine-cross, I., 1999, “Replacement refrigerants for water chillers,” Proc. of Seminar on ODS Phase out; Solution for the Refrigeration Sector, Kuta, Bali, Indonesia, pp. 1–6.
8.
James
M.
,
Calm
P. F.
and
Domanski
P. A.
,
2004
, “
R22-replacement status
,”
ASHRAE Journal
,
46
, pp.
29
37
.
9.
Bare
J. C.
,
1993
, “
Simulation of performance of chlorine-free fluorinated ethers and fluorinated hydrocarbons to replace CFC-11 and CFC-114 in chillers
,”
ASHRAE Trans.
,
99
, pp.
397
407
.
10.
Browne
M. W.
, and
Bansal
P. K.
,
2001
, “
An elemental NTU-ε model for vapor compression chillers
,”
Int. J. Refrigeration
,
24
, pp.
612
627
.
11.
Swider
D. J.
,
2003
, “
A comparison of empirically based steady-state models for vapor compression liquid chillers
,”
Applied Thermal Engineering
,
23
, pp.
539
556
.
12.
Bechtler
H.
,
Browne
M. W.
,
Bansal
P. K.
, and
Kecman
V.
,
2001
, “
New approach to dynamic Modeling of vapor-compression liquid chillers: artificial neural networks
,”
Applied Thermal Engineering
,
21
, pp.
941
953
.
13.
Gordon
J. M.
,
Ng
K. C.
, and
Chua
H. T.
,
1997
, “
Optimization chiller operating on finite-time thermodynamics: universal modeling and experimental confirmation
,”
Int. J. Refrigeration
,
20
, pp.
191
200
.
14.
Chua
H. T.
,
Ng
K. C.
, and
Gordon
J. M.
,
1997
, “
Experimental study of the fundamental properties of reciprocating chillers and their relation to thermodynamic modeling and chiller design
,”
Int. J. of Heat and Mass Transfer
,
39
, pp.
2195
2204
.
15.
Devotta
S.
,
Parande
M. G.
, and
Patwardhan
V. R.
,
1998
, “
Performance and heat transfer characteristics of HFC-134a and CFC-12 in a water chiller
,”
Applied Thermal Engineering
,
18
, pp.
569
578
.
16.
Gordon
J. M.
,
Ng
K. C.
,
Chua
H. T.
, and
Lim
C. K.
,
2000
, “
How varying condenser coolant flow rate affects chiller performance; thermodynamic modeling and experimental confirmation
,”
Applied Thermal Engineering
,
20
, pp.
1149
1159
17.
DuPont, 1997, “DuPont SUVA MP Refrigerant Blends; Properties, Uses, Storage and Handling,” DuPont Chemicals, Wilmington, DE, USA.
18.
Halimic
E.
,
Ross
D.
,
Agnew
B.
,
Anderson
A.
, and
Potts
I.
,
2003
, “
A comparison of the operating performance of alternative refrigerants
,”
Applied Thermal Engineering
,
23
, pp.
1441
1451
19.
ASHRAE, 2001, “Fundamental Handbook,” American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
20.
Moffat, R., 1988, “Describing the Uncertainties in Experimental Results,” Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science, Elsevier Science Pub. Co. Inc, New York.
21.
Fatouh
M.
,
Nabil
M.
, and
El-Genady
E.
,
2002
, “
Performance of a vapor compression heat pump using R134a for cooling and heating applications
,
Eng. Research J.
(Helwan University, Cairo, Egypt),
71
, pp.
103
117
.
This content is only available via PDF.
You do not currently have access to this content.