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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Single Phase v Two Phase Refrigeration - Short 101

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Careers, Business, Self-improvement, Education

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 10 November 2020

⏱️ 9 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast episode, Bryan talks about the differences between single-phase and two-phase refrigeration. This particular episode is about the fundamentals of physics, chemistry, and science in general.

When we talk about phases, we're referring to the changes in the states of matter. We typically think of the states of matter as solid, liquid, and gas. In refrigeration systems, the refrigerant usually changes from a liquid to a vapor in the evaporator and then from a vapor to a liquid in the condenser; that is an example of two-phase refrigeration. We get two-phase refrigeration anytime we're changing the state of matter in order to accomplish refrigeration.

When you change the state of matter, you transfer a lot more heat than with a single-phase system. You get more heat in and out between phases due to latent. Between a solid and a liquid, the energy that goes towards the phase change is the latent heat of fusion. Between a liquid and a gas, the energy that goes into the phase change is the latent heat of vaporization. It takes a lot more heat to condense or boil water than it does to change its temperature by one degree, so we take advantage of that capacity to absorb heat into the boiling refrigerant.

There are also forms of single-phase refrigeration, including John Gorrie's open-refrigeration machine. Gorrie's machine was just compressing and decompressing air; it was not changing the state of the air. In single-phase refrigeration, we can't make use of the extra energy from changing states. In those cases, condensers would be gas coolers.

However, when you think about it, the process of refrigerating the space is a form of single-phase refrigeration; we don't change the phase of the air. So, we merely use two-phase refrigeration to drive single-phase refrigeration.

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey Brian here. This is another short episode and really these are short episodes

0:09.4

but this is a series of episodes that we're going to call fundamentals. So these are the sorts of things if you want to kind of better understand some of the terms and just kind of think about what we do maybe, and I don't want to say deeper because it's not like certainly no merit in understanding

0:25.7

fancy words if it doesn't help you do the job.

0:27.4

But sometimes just thinking about these things and kind of at their roots a little bit may help

0:32.0

you to understand things a little bit better.

0:34.5

It may open up a kind of eureka moment for you.

0:36.8

So anyway, that's what we're doing today.

0:38.6

This is a short episode and we're going to talk about single phase versus two phase refrigeration which sort of pairs on the last episode

0:45.5

where we talked about open versus closed refrigeration just another thing to understand.

0:51.7

But before we do that, we want to thank our sponsors.

0:54.8

And our sponsors are carrier and carrier.com, Navac and Navac Global.com.

1:00.4

Refrigeration Technologies at Refriger tech.com.

1:03.5

They make Viper and Venom Packs and Nylog and all kinds of great chemicals that are well thought out and that work great for technicians in the field.

1:12.0

Find out more by going to Refrigitech.com.

1:14.0

All right, so we're talking about single phase

1:19.0

versus two phase refrigeration and what is that? So especially when you're talking in terms of

1:24.5

engineering, engineers will talk about two-phase refrigeration and what they mean

1:29.0

is is that there is a phase change and the phases as we know them, the kind of the typical ones and there are some more but the typical ones are going from solid to liquid and liquid to vapor, vapor to liquid, liquid to solid.

1:43.7

So you're kind of, those are your options.

1:45.8

And most of what we do in our world

1:48.5

is we are changing back and forth from liquid to vapor.

1:51.2

So you've got your vapor coming down the suction line going into the

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