He Peng, Nian Quanxin, Fang Wenzhen, et al. Measurement of Refrigerator Cooling Capacity Loss and Improvement of Its Thermal Insulation[J]. Journal of refrigeration, 2017, 38(3).
DOI:
He Peng, Nian Quanxin, Fang Wenzhen, et al. Measurement of Refrigerator Cooling Capacity Loss and Improvement of Its Thermal Insulation[J]. Journal of refrigeration, 2017, 38(3). DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.0253-4339.2017.03.070.
Measurement of Refrigerator Cooling Capacity Loss and Improvement of Its Thermal Insulation
the cold loss of a fridge when unloaded was studied through an experiment
and an improvement was proposed. First
the heat transfer process between the fridge interior and the external environment was simplified into a one-dimensional heat conduction process. On an all-weather simulation experiment platform
to investigate the effect of ambient temperature on cooling capacity loss
the ambient temperature was set to 5
10
15
20
25
30
35
and 40 ℃ with a fixed ambient humidity of 80%. To investigate the effect of ambient humidity on cooling capacity loss
the ambient humidity was set to 55
65
75
85
and 95% with a fixed ambient temperature of 25 ℃. The temperature of the inner and outer walls for every combination of the above two series of parameters was measured when the refrigerator was unloaded. According to the Fourier heat conduction law
the heat flux of each wall can be obtained
and then the cold loss is calculated. The results show that the cold loss of the refrigerator increases with ambient temperature
and the ambient humidity has no effect on cooling capacity loss. The cold loss of the refrigerator back wall is obviously greater than that of the other walls
while that of the top wall is smaller. The insulation of the refrigerator back wall is thickened to decrease the entire cold loss
and the insulation of the refrigerator top wall is made thinner to guarantee the refrigerator storage capacity. This leads to an approximately uniform cold loss distribution of the refrigerator walls.