ZHANG HUAFU, ZHANG QINGCHUN, TONG LIGE, et al. Experimental Study on Performance of Roots Steam Compressor. [J]. Journal of refrigeration, 2022, 43(1).
DOI:
ZHANG HUAFU, ZHANG QINGCHUN, TONG LIGE, et al. Experimental Study on Performance of Roots Steam Compressor. [J]. Journal of refrigeration, 2022, 43(1). DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.0253-4339.2022.01.068.
Experimental Study on Performance of Roots Steam Compressor
The compressor is the core equipment of a vapor compression system
which significantly affects the energy consumption and stability of the system. An experimental system was built for the vapor compression system driven by the roots compressor
in which the evaporation temperature
evaporation pressure
compressor pressure
and evaporation capacity were 80–100 °C
46.60–101.64 kPa
17.86–36.03 kPa and 125.72–424.85 kg/h
respecitvely. The suction flow rate
compression specific power
volumetric efficiency
and isentropic efficiency of the root water vapor compressor with varying evaporation temperatures were studied experimentally. The results show that the suction flow rate (7.10–11.74 m3/min) gradually increased
and the compression specific power (310.69–158.54 kJ/kg) gradually decreased with the increase in evaporation temperature. Both the volumetric efficiency (52.21%–71.54%) and isentropic efficiency (16.48%–36.15%) increased with the increase in evaporation temperature. Increasing the frequency can enhance the efficiency of the compressor
and the measured volumetric efficiency and compression specific power were consistent with the data in previous studies. There was a difference between the experimental and theoretical values of the volumetric efficiency and the isentropic efficiency of the compressor
but this difference decreased with an increase in the evaporation temperature
and the root water vapor compressor was more stable and highly efficient in the range of evaporation temperature of 90–100 °C.
关键词
罗茨压缩机水蒸气压缩容积效率等熵效率实验研究
Keywords
roots compressorwater vapor compressionvolumetric efficiencyisentropic efficiencyexperimental study