Investigating the exergetic and environmental effects of subcooling and superheating processes on the performance of direct expansion systems
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Date
2014
Authors
M. Ziya Sogut
Hikmet Tahir Karakoc
Zuhal Oktay
A. Hepbasli
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
Yes
OpenAIRE Downloads
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Recently subcooling and superheating applications which are proposed as an approach for the efficient use of energy have positive effect on the emission next to increasing the energy efficiency. This study examines energetic exergetic and environmental effects of subcooling and superheating processes in cooling applications separately. In this study a direct expansion system(DX) which is usedwidely in supermarket cooling applications is taken into consideration. The evaporator temperatures of −25 °C and 0 °C the refrigerants of R-22 R-404A and R-134a which are preferred widely in DX systems and minimum and maximum leakage rates of 3 and 30 % are taken as reference values for the analysis. According to the results while subcooling and subheating processes increase approximately 10 % of COP and exergy efficiencies based on refrigerants and decrease CO2 emissions for all refrigerants. The study also concluded with an emphasis on the importance of subcooling and superheating applications especially for DX systems and the importance of the preference refrigerant. © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Description
Keywords
Co2 Emission, Cop, Dx Systems, Exergy Analyses, Refrigerants, Carbon Dioxide, Energy Efficiency, Exergy, Refrigerants, Co2 Emissions, Cooling Applications, Direct Expansion Systems, Efficient Use Of Energy, Evaporator Temperature, Exergy Analysis, Exergy Efficiencies, Reference Values, Cooling, Carbon dioxide, Energy efficiency, Exergy, Refrigerants, CO2 emissions, Cooling applications, Direct expansion systems, Efficient use of energy, Evaporator temperature, Exergy Analysis, Exergy efficiencies, Reference values, Cooling, DX Systems, Exergy Analyses, Refrigerants, COP, CO2 Emission, Dx Systems, Refrigerants, Co2 Emission, Cop, Exergy Analyses
Fields of Science
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WoS Q
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OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
Progress in Exergy, Energy, and the Environment
Volume
Issue
Start Page
713
End Page
722
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Citations
Scopus : 2
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 6
SCOPUS™ Citations
2
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