z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
ENERGY AND EXERGY THERMODYNAMIC ANALYSIS OF A TWO-STAGE COMPRESSION REFRIGERATION SYSTEM INTEGRATED WITH AN ABSORPTION SYSTEM (NH3+H2O)
Author(s) -
Guayanay Correa,
Jeferson Ávila Souza,
Carlos Prentice-Hernández,
Luíz Alberto Oliveira Rocha
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
engenharia térmica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1676-1790
DOI - 10.5380/reterm.v7i1.61735
Subject(s) - refrigeration , exergy , absorption refrigerator , process engineering , coefficient of performance , water cooling , environmental science , nuclear engineering , cooling capacity , exergy efficiency , waste heat , thermodynamics , mechanical engineering , engineering , heat exchanger , heat pump , physics
This work proposes an energetic and exergetic thermodynamic analysis of two refrigeration systems: one is a conventional two stages cooling system by steam compression of ammonia and the other is named integrated refrigeration system. The conventional system, used as reference, is largely employed in cooling fish industry. The integrated refrigeration system is similar to the conventional one, although it uses in the intermediate cooling, between the stages of high and low pressure, cold water in closed circuit. The cold water is supplied by ammonia-water absorption system integrated to the conventional compression system. The calorific energy supplied is obtained from waste exceeding of the fish meal production thus the energy delivered tothe integrated refrigeration system is considered of zero cost. Numeric simulation is employed to compare the behavior of both systems. The results obtained in this comparison show that the integrated refrigeration system operates with a reduction of up to 19.73 % in COP. However, the integratedrefrigeration system presented an increase of up to 25.57% in exergetic efficiency and 33.09% in frigorific capacity in relation to the conventionalsystem. These results, added to the decrease of operational cost which will bequantified in a further study, will make very attractive the use of the integrated refrigeration system.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here