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The Absorption Cycle was invented in 1846 by Ferdinand
Carré for the purpose of producing ice with heat input. It
is based on the principle that absorbing ammonia in water causes
the vapor pressure to decrease. Absorption cycles produce cooling
and/or heating with thermal input and minimal electric input, by
using heat and mass exchangers, pumps and valves.
An absorption cycle can be viewed as a mechanical
vapor-compression cycle, with the compressor replaced by a
generator, absorber and liquid pump. The absorption cycle enjoys
the benefits of requiring a fraction of the electrical input, plus
uses the natural substances ammonia and water, instead of ozone
depleting halocarbons. The absorption cycle enjoyed widespread use
from the 1920s as gas powered refrigerators/ice-makers.
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The basic operation of an ammonia-water absorption
cycle is as follows. Heat is applied to the generator, which contains
a solution of ammonia water, rich in ammonia. The heat causes high
pressure ammonia vapor to desorb the solution. Heat can either be
from combustion of a fuel such as clean-burning natural gas, or
waste heat from engine exhaust, other industrial processes, solar
heat, or any other heat source. The high pressure ammonia vapor
flows to a condenser, typically cooled by outdoor air. The ammonia
vapor condenses into a high pressure liquid, releasing heat which
can be used for product heat, such as space heating.
The high pressure ammonia liquid goes through a restriction,
to the low pressure side of the cycle. This liquid, at low pressures,
boils or evaporates in the evaporator. This provides the cooling
or refrigeration product. The low pressure vapor flows to the absorber,
which contains a water-rich solution obtained from the generator.
This solution absorbs the ammonia while releasing the heat of absorption.
This heat can be used as product heat, or for internal heat recovery
in other parts of the cycle, thus unloading the burner and increasing
cycle efficiency. The solution in the absorber, now once again rich
in ammonia, is pumped to the generator, where it is ready to repeat
the cycle.
An absorption cycle can use a variety of working pairs.
The working pair is made up of a refrigerant, typically ammonia
or water; and a solution which absorbs the refrigerant. Other working
pairs include lithium-bromide-water; TriDroxide-water; and Alkitrate-water.
Tridroxide and Alkitrate are Energy Concepts patented working pairs
with specialty applications in industry.
Absorption cycles can operate at high efficiency by
utilizing advanced cycles, using generator-absorber heat exchange,
multiple pressures, and multiple effects. These cycles use extensive
internal heat recovery to require less prime fuel input to produce
the same thermal output. High efficiency operation, plus benefits
of environmentally friendly refrigerants, clean-burning fuels, and
few moving parts requiring maintenance make absorption a very good
choice for consumers.
Absorption cycles can produce a variety of thermal
outputs. In common commercial use today are gas-fired absorption
chillers, which produce chilled water for space cooling applications.
The absorption cycle can produce low temperature cooling for ice
production or cold storage. Turbine inlet cooling is a very efficient
use of absorption cooling, boosting turbine efficiency by up to
15%. Many other applications exist in industry, where waste heat
is available and cooling is required. Advanced cycles can also produce
electrical or shaft power by producing steam or high pressure vapor
to power a turbine/generator pair.
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