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Flow and Capacity Calculations

The document discusses flow and capacity calculations for air conditioning applications. It provides a formula to calculate heat exchange (Q) based on flow rate (W), specific heat of fluid (C), and temperature change of fluid (ΔT). For water, the formula is commonly expressed as load (Btu/hr) equal to flow (USgpm) multiplied by the temperature change in and out multiplied by 500. Design conditions are typically a 44°F supply water temperature and 2.4 gpm/ton. Using these conditions and the formula, the evaporator temperature change is calculated to be 10°F, making the entering water temperature 54°F. Chilled water flow rates should be maintained between 3-12 feet per second

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
162 views

Flow and Capacity Calculations

The document discusses flow and capacity calculations for air conditioning applications. It provides a formula to calculate heat exchange (Q) based on flow rate (W), specific heat of fluid (C), and temperature change of fluid (ΔT). For water, the formula is commonly expressed as load (Btu/hr) equal to flow (USgpm) multiplied by the temperature change in and out multiplied by 500. Design conditions are typically a 44°F supply water temperature and 2.4 gpm/ton. Using these conditions and the formula, the evaporator temperature change is calculated to be 10°F, making the entering water temperature 54°F. Chilled water flow rates should be maintained between 3-12 feet per second

Uploaded by

jokish
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Flow and Capacity Calculations

For air conditioning applications, the common design conditions are 44F supply water temperature
and 2.4 gpm/ton. The temperature change in the fluid for either the condenser or the evaporator can
be described using the following formula:
Q = W x C x T
Where
Q = Quantity of heat exchanged (Btu/hr)
W = flow rate of fluid (USgpm)
C = specific heat of fluid (Btu/lb F)
T = temperature change of fluid (F )
Assuming the fluid is water, the formula takes the more common form of:
Load (Btu/hr) = Flow (USgpm) x (Fin Fout) x 500
Or
Load (tons) = Flow (USgpm) x (Fin Fout)/24
Using this equation and the above design conditions, the temperature change in the evaporator is
found to be 10F. The water temperature entering the evaporator is then 54F.
Most air conditioning design conditions are based on 75F and 50% relative humidity (RH) in the
occupied space. The dewpoint for air at this condition is 55.08F. Most HVAC designs are based on
cooling the air to this dewpoint to maintain the proper RH in the space. Using a 10F approach at the
cooling coil means the supply chilled water needs to be around 44F or 45F.
The designer is not tied to these typical design conditions. In fact, more energy efficient solutions can
be found by modifying the design conditions, as the project requires.
Changing the chilled water flow rate affects a specific chiller's performance. Too low a flow rate
lowers the chiller efficiency and ultimately leads to laminar flow. The minimum flow rate is typically
around 3 fps (feet per second). Too high a flow rate leads to vibration, noise and tube erosion. The
maximum flow rate is typically around 12 fps. The chilled water flow rate should be maintained
between these limits of 3 to 12 fps.
The condenser water flows through the condenser of the chiller. The condenser is also a heat
exchanger. In this case the heat absorbed from the building, plus the work of compression, leaves the
refrigerant (condensing the refrigerant) and enters the condenser water (raising its temperature). The
condenser has the same limitations to flow change as the evaporator.

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