Temperature Control Equipment
●Facility water
The cooling water flowing through a water-cooled condenser used to expel waste heat generated in the refrigeration circuit to the outside.
In ordinary factories or buildings, fluids such as cooling tower water or chiller water are used as facility water.
●Flow sensor/Flow switch
These components monitor the flow rate of the fluid. The flow sensor measures the flow rate linearly. The flow switch only has the function of commencing operation when the flow rate reaches a certain level, and does not perform measurement of the flow volume.
●Fluorinated fluids
Inert fluids in the fluorine series. There are many types, including perfluoropolyether (PFPE), perfluorocarbon (PFC), hydrofluoropolyether (HFPE), and hydrofluoroether (HFE), but they share the characteristic of high electrical insulation properties, and grades can be selected with appropriate fluidity even at low temperatures, such as –100°C, and high temperatures, such as 200°C and above.
They are chemically inert and non-poisonous.
Products are sold on the market, such as Fluorinert™, made by 3M, and GALDEN®, made by Solvay Solexis.
●Fluorinert™
The product name of a fluorinated fluid manufactured by 3M.
Its basic structure is a perfluorocarbon, but it has a wide variety of chemical structures, and various grades can be selected with differing temperature and viscosity ranges.
●Fundamentals of refrigeration circuits
In a refrigeration circuit, refrigerant gas injected into the circuit repeatedly travels through a cycle of compression, condensation, expansion and evaporation, creating high-temperature and low-temperature sections in the circuit. The compressor compresses low-pressure refrigerant gas and discharges the gas at a high temperature and pressure level.
The hot, pressurized refrigerant gas enters the condenser where it is cooled by the external air or cooling water and condenses to form a high-pressure liquid refrigerant. As the high-pressure liquid refrigerant passes through a constricting mechanism, such as an expansion valve, it rapidly depressurizes and some of the refrigerant evaporates. The release of evaporation heat causes the refrigerant itself to cool so that it becomes a combination of gas and liquid at a lowtemperature and pressure level. In its combined gas-liquid state, the refrigerant enters the evaporator where it continually evaporates while absorbing the heat within the evaporator, thereby cooling the interior of the evaporator. When the refrigerant emerges from the evaporator, it evaporates entirely and becomes a low-pressure refrigerant gas. The low-pressure refrigerant gas is then drawn into the compressor and again becomes a high-temperature, high pressure gas as the cycle is repeated.
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