Particular characteristics of a transcritical CO2 refrigeration cycle with an ejector.

Author(s) : DENG J. Q., JIANG P. X., LU T., et al.

Type of article: Article

Summary

The present study describes a theoretical analysis of a transcritical CO2 ejector expansion refrigeration cycle (EERC) which uses an ejector as the main expansion device instead of an expansion valve. The system performance is strongly coupled to the ejector entrainment ratio which must produce the proper CO2 quality at the ejector exit. If the exit quality is not correct, either the liquid will enter the compressor or the evaporator will be filled with vapor. Thus, the ejector entrainment ratio significantly influences the refrigeration effect with an optimum ratio giving the ideal system performance. For the working conditions studied in this paper, the ejector expansion system maximum cooling COP is up to 18.6% better than the internal heat exchanger cycle (IHEC) cooling COP and 22.0% better than the conventional vapor compression refrigeration cycle (VCRC) cooling COP. At the conditions for the maximum cooling COP, the ejector expansion cycle refrigeration output is 8.2% better than the internal heat exchanger cycle refrigeration output and 11.5% better than the conventional cycle refrigeration output. An exergy analysis showed that the ejector expansion cycle greatly reduces the throttling losses. The analysis was also used to study the variations of the ejector expansion cycle cooling COP for various heat rejection pressures, refrigerant temperatures at the gas cooler exit, nozzle efficiencies and diffuser efficiencies. [Reprinted with permission from Elsevier. Copyright, 2006].

Details

  • Original title: Particular characteristics of a transcritical CO2 refrigeration cycle with an ejector.
  • Record ID : 2007-0990
  • Languages: English
  • Source: Applied Thermal Engineering - vol. 27 - n. 2-3
  • Publication date: 2007/02

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