4.8 • 985 Ratings
🗓️ 22 February 2018
⏱️ 14 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In this short episode, we review the basics of the refrigerant circuit. The standard HVAC refrigeration circuit has four main components: compressor, condenser, metering device, and evaporator.
The compressor squeezes refrigerant vapor into a smaller volume by applying lots of pressure. It simultaneously moves and compresses gaseous refrigerant. The more a compressor has to compress a gas, the less gas it moves. The more gas a compressor moves, the less gas it compresses. Then, the refrigerant leaves the compressor via the discharge line. The discharge line is very hot because the temperature increases with pressure.
The hot vapor feeds into the top of the condenser. The condenser brings the gaseous refrigerant back down to a liquid. Condensers come in all shapes for various applications, but all condensers' main goal is heat exchange. Condensers desuperheat, fully condense (change vapor to liquid), and subcool. Subcooled liquid refrigerant leaves the bottom of the condenser via the liquid line.
The liquid line leads warm, subcooled liquid refrigerant to the metering device. The metering device's goal is to drop the refrigerant's pressure. That pressure drop facilitates boiling in the evaporator coil.
The evaporator absorbs heat from the space. Fans blow warm air over the coils, allowing that heat to come into contact with the refrigerant. The refrigerant boils when it absorbs enough heat. The last few rows of the evaporator are where superheating occurs. Superheat is the temperature above the saturation point; superheat indicates that the refrigerant is all vapor, no longer a liquid-vapor mix. Then, the vapor refrigerant travels back to the compressor via the suction line; the refrigerant circuit restarts. The suction line is rather cool; we use some of that cool refrigerant gas to cool down the compressor.
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0:00.0 | Hey there, thanks for joining us on this attention deficit version of HVAC school, for those of us |
0:08.8 | with shorter attention spans who want me to get to the point quicker. I get a lot of requests for |
0:14.5 | very simple training topics and that's largely what we do on the HVAC |
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0:29.0 | also I have to mention testo. Testo has been a long-term partner of HVAC school and Parker Sporlin and the Zoomlock |
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0:36.6 | So those are our partners. |
0:37.6 | They're the ones who make this possible. |
0:38.8 | But I want to do these kind of like very quick episodes, just as quick recaps of things that are very important |
0:44.9 | to the trade. They don't require a full podcast. Now there is a full podcast on the basic |
0:49.6 | refrigerant circuit way back, so I don't even, it's just months and months ago. You can go back and |
0:53.6 | find that. You can find all the tech tips by going to HVACR school.com. But I |
0:57.9 | want to quickly, for those of you in school, those of you who are new texts or |
1:02.1 | older texts who just forget this stuff, we're going to go quickly through the basic refrigerant circuit. |
1:07.0 | So let's start with the compressor. So the compressor, what does it do? It compresses. The names of these things are just amazing now what's the |
1:13.5 | difference between compressing and pumping right can you pump something |
1:16.4 | without compressing it and the answer is yes because liquids are largely |
1:20.0 | uncompressible you don't it's very difficult to compress a |
1:23.0 | fluid. But you can compress a vapor. So compressing a vapor means that you take |
1:27.2 | something that takes up a larger volume and you force it into a smaller |
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