Chiller
A chiller is a machine designed to remove heat from a liquid coolant, typically water or a water-glycol mixture, through either a vapor-compression or absorption refrigeration cycle, allowing the chilled liquid to absorb thermal energy from air, processes, or equipment in various systems.[1][2] Chillers operate on fundamental thermodynamic principles to achieve cooling, with vapor-compression types using mechanical compressors—such as centrifugal, screw, scroll, or reciprocating—to pressurize and circulate refrigerant, which then evaporates to absorb heat, condenses to release it, and repeats the cycle after expansion.[3][4] In contrast, absorption chillers employ heat as the energy source, typically from steam, hot water, or exhaust gases, to drive a cycle involving a refrigerant like water and an absorbent such as lithium bromide, avoiding mechanical compression and often integrating with cogeneration systems for efficiency.[1][3] These systems are sized in tons of cooling capacity, where one ton equals the heat removal rate to melt 2,000 pounds of ice in 24 hours, and modern units achieve efficiencies measured by coefficients of performance (COP) often exceeding 5 for water-cooled models.[5][6] Primarily deployed in heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) for large-scale applications, chillers serve commercial buildings, hospitals, data centers, and universities by producing chilled water distributed via pumps and coils to cool spaces efficiently.[7][5] In industrial settings, they support process cooling for manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, and food processing, where precise temperature control is critical to equipment performance and product quality.[8][9] Water-cooled chillers, which reject heat to cooling towers, dominate large installations due to higher efficiency, while air-cooled variants suit smaller or remote sites without water access.[10][5] Notable advancements in chiller technology focus on energy efficiency, refrigerant transitions to low-global-warming-potential options like HFOs amid phase-outs of hydrofluorocarbons, and integration with smart controls for variable-speed operation and demand response.[11][6] These developments address environmental regulations and operational costs, with chillers often representing the largest energy consumer in central plants, underscoring their role in sustainable building design.[1][7]Overview
Definition and Purpose
A chiller is a machine that removes heat from a liquid coolant, typically water or a water-glycol mixture, via a vapor-compression or absorption refrigeration cycle, thereby producing chilled water for subsequent heat exchange in various systems.[12][13] This process enables the chiller to achieve temperatures below ambient levels, serving as a central component in cooling applications such as space conditioning and industrial processes.[14] The primary purpose of a chiller is to facilitate controlled cooling for purposes including occupant comfort in buildings, precise temperature regulation in manufacturing, and protection of sensitive equipment from overheating.[15] Unlike direct-expansion (DX) systems, which circulate refrigerant directly to cooling coils for air conditioning, chillers employ a secondary loop where the chilled liquid acts as an intermediary heat transfer medium, allowing for more efficient distribution over larger areas.[16][17] At its core, a chiller operates on fundamental heat transfer principles where heat is absorbed from the coolant through the evaporation of a refrigerant in the evaporator section, lowering the coolant's temperature, and then rejected to the environment via the condensation of the refrigerant in the condenser section.[18] This cycle effectively moves thermal energy from a low-temperature source to a higher-temperature sink, defying natural heat flow without violating thermodynamic laws.[19] Chiller capacity is commonly measured in tons of refrigeration (TR), where one ton represents the rate of heat removal equivalent to melting 2,000 pounds (907 kg) of ice at 32°F (0°C) in 24 hours, corresponding to 12,000 British thermal units per hour (BTU/hr) or approximately 3.517 kilowatts (kW).[20][21] This unit provides a standardized metric for sizing chillers to match cooling demands in practical installations.[22]Historical Development
The development of chiller technology began in the early 19th century with foundational inventions in refrigeration cycles. In 1834, American inventor Jacob Perkins patented the first practical vapor-compression refrigeration system in England, utilizing ether as the refrigerant in a closed cycle that compressed, condensed, expanded, and evaporated the vapor to produce cooling effects.[23] This innovation laid the groundwork for mechanical cooling but saw limited immediate adoption due to the dangers of early refrigerants like ether. Concurrently, absorption-based cooling emerged in the 1850s, pioneered by French inventor Ferdinand Carré, who developed an ammonia-water absorption refrigerator in 1858, improving on his brother Edmond's 1850 sulfuric acid-water system; Carré's design received a U.S. patent in 1860 and enabled cooling without mechanical compression by using heat to drive the absorption-desorption process.[24] Key milestones in the 20th century advanced chiller scalability and application, particularly for air conditioning and industry. In 1922, Willis Carrier invented the centrifugal chiller, a high-capacity vapor-compression machine that used a centrifugal compressor to handle large cooling loads efficiently, marking the first major breakthrough in comfort cooling and enabling widespread air conditioning in buildings.[25] Following World War II, chiller adoption surged in industrial sectors; by 1950, the plastics industry integrated chillers to control molding temperatures and meet rising demand for consistent product quality, while post-war economic growth facilitated broader deployment in manufacturing and commercial facilities worldwide.[26] Technological shifts in the mid-20th century addressed safety and efficiency challenges. During the 1930s, the industry transitioned from toxic ammonia refrigerants to safer chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) like Freon, introduced by General Motors and DuPont, which reduced risks in commercial installations and boosted chiller proliferation in urban environments.[27] Absorption chillers gained prominence in the 1960s for their energy efficiency, with lithium bromide-water systems becoming commercially viable; by that decade, they accounted for about 40% of U.S. chiller sales, favored for utilizing waste heat or natural gas in cogeneration setups.[28] The 1970s oil embargo profoundly influenced absorption technology, as soaring natural gas prices led to a sharp decline in U.S. sales from over 700,000 tons annually to under 50,000 tons by the mid-decade, prompting innovations in hybrid systems and a temporary shift toward electric vapor-compression alternatives amid fuel scarcity concerns.[29] From the 2020s to 2025, chiller advancements have emphasized energy optimization and digital integration. Variable-speed drives (VSDs) have become standard in modern compressors, allowing dynamic adjustment of motor speeds to match cooling demands and achieve up to 30-50% energy savings compared to fixed-speed systems.[30] Smart controls, incorporating IoT sensors and AI-driven analytics, enable real-time monitoring, predictive maintenance, and remote optimization, enhancing overall system efficiency in data centers and smart buildings.[31]Applications
Air Conditioning Systems
Chillers form the core of central HVAC systems in buildings, where they generate chilled water in a dedicated plant and distribute it via piping networks to terminal devices such as air handling units, fan coil units, or radiant panels for space cooling. This hydronic approach allows for centralized production of cooling while enabling decentralized delivery, reducing ductwork complexity compared to all-air systems. In water-cooled configurations, chillers pair with cooling towers to reject heat into a water loop, achieving higher efficiency by condensing at the wet-bulb temperature, which is lower than ambient air temperature; these systems are often installed indoors with supporting pumps and towers. Air-cooled chillers, by contrast, use finned coils exposed to outdoor air for direct heat rejection, simplifying installation without water infrastructure but performing best in moderate climates.[32][33] Sizing chillers for air conditioning involves calculating the building's peak cooling load—factored by elements like occupancy, solar gain, internal equipment, and local climate—to determine capacity in tons (where 1 ton equals 12,000 BTU/hr of heat removal). For commercial buildings, capacities typically range from 200 to 500 tons, corresponding to structures of 100,000 to 300,000 square feet at a rule-of-thumb load of 1 ton per 400–600 square feet, though hospitals may require higher densities due to medical equipment heat. Part-load efficiency is a key consideration, as buildings rarely operate at full capacity; modern chillers incorporate variable-speed drives and staging to maintain high performance at 25–75% loads, minimizing energy waste during off-peak hours. Selection also accounts for future expansion, with modular designs allowing scalability.[34][35] Compared to direct expansion (DX) systems, which use refrigerant directly at each air handler, chiller-based chilled water systems excel in energy efficiency for large-scale applications by leveraging water's superior heat capacity and enabling heat recovery options, potentially reducing operating costs by 20–30% in high-load environments. This efficiency stems from optimized central plant operations, including variable flow pumping and economizer integration, which DX units struggle to match across expansive zones. Additionally, chilled water provides superior zoning flexibility, as pumps can modulate flow to specific areas via valves, supporting independent temperature control in multi-story or partitioned buildings without the refrigerant piping limitations of DX.[36] In practice, chillers support diverse air conditioning needs: in office buildings, they deliver consistent comfort cooling to open-plan spaces; hospitals rely on them for precise, reliable temperature control in operating rooms and labs to safeguard sensitive equipment and patient health; data centers employ high-capacity units, often 200–850 tons per chiller, to dissipate server heat loads exceeding 100 kW per rack, with increasing integration in high-density AI facilities using liquid cooling hybrids as of 2025 to manage intensified thermal demands from AI workloads.[37][38][39][40] District cooling systems extend this further, with a shared central plant supplying chilled water via insulated pipes to multiple facilities—such as urban campuses or mixed-use developments—boosting overall efficiency through economies of scale and redundancy, as seen in applications serving data centers with 99.99% uptime guarantees.[41]Industrial Processes
In manufacturing and processing industries, chillers play a critical role in maintaining precise temperatures for temperature-sensitive operations, ensuring product quality, process efficiency, and equipment longevity. These systems provide cooling for a variety of applications, including plastics molding where chillers rapidly cool molds to solidify materials and prevent defects, food processing to preserve perishables during packaging and storage, and pharmaceuticals where they regulate reactor temperatures typically between 5°C and 15°C to support chemical reactions and sterilization processes. Additionally, chillers are essential for cooling high-heat equipment such as lasers in cutting and welding operations and MRI machines in medical facilities, where stable coolant temperatures prevent overheating and maintain operational accuracy, as well as in electric vehicle battery production for thermal management during cell manufacturing and testing to ensure performance and safety as of 2025.[42][43][44][45][46][47] Industrial chillers are often customized for demanding environments, featuring high-precision temperature control with stability as tight as ±0.5°C to meet exact process requirements in sectors like semiconductors and biotechnology. In hazardous settings, such as chemical plants or oil refineries, explosion-proof designs incorporate reinforced components and sealed electrical systems to prevent ignition from flammable vapors, complying with Class I, Division 2 standards. These adaptations ensure safe and reliable performance without compromising cooling capacity.[48][49] Chillers in industrial settings vary by scale, with portable units offering flexibility for smaller or temporary operations—such as cooling individual machines with capacities up to 40 tons—while central systems handle larger loads across entire facilities for greater efficiency. For instance, breweries commonly deploy central chillers exceeding 100 tons to control fermentation temperatures, circulating chilled glycol through tanks to maintain yeast activity and beer consistency. Efficiency enhancements include heat recovery mechanisms that capture waste heat from the condenser for process heating applications, such as preheating water in manufacturing lines, and integration with programmable logic controllers (PLCs) for automated monitoring and adjustment of cooling parameters based on real-time data.[50][51][52][53]Types of Chillers
Vapor-Compression Chillers
Vapor-compression chillers are the most prevalent type of chillers, utilizing mechanical compression to drive the refrigeration cycle and providing efficient cooling for a wide range of applications from small commercial systems to large industrial facilities.[54] These systems operate by compressing a refrigerant vapor to high pressure and temperature, enabling heat rejection, followed by expansion and evaporation to absorb heat from the chilled water or process fluid.[55] They are electrically powered, offering reliable performance and scalability, though they require careful consideration of compressor type for optimal efficiency and noise management.[56] The primary subtypes of vapor-compression chillers are distinguished by their compressor technology, which significantly influences efficiency, capacity range, and suitability for specific loads. Reciprocating compressors, using pistons to compress refrigerant, are suited for smaller capacities of 0.5 to 150 tons and peak load operations, achieving efficiencies of 0.7–1.3 kW/ton but requiring higher maintenance due to multiple moving parts.[56] Scroll compressors, which employ two spiral elements for compression, excel in compact, low-capacity systems up to 30 tons, providing quiet operation and low vibration with good overall efficiency for spot or make-up cooling.[57] Screw compressors, featuring twin helical rotors, handle medium to large capacities from 70 to 750 tons with robust performance and part-load efficiencies up to 7.0 COP, making them cost-effective for capacities exceeding 200 tons.[56] Centrifugal compressors, relying on impeller rotation to impart kinetic energy to the refrigerant, are ideal for high-capacity applications over 100 tons—often exceeding 750 tons—with superior full-load efficiencies of 0.5–0.7 kW/ton, though they risk surging at loads below 25%.[58] These subtypes allow selection based on load requirements, with centrifugal models dominating large-scale installations due to their scalability and energy performance.[59] A vapor-compression chiller's system layout consists of four core components arranged in a closed loop: the compressor, which raises refrigerant pressure; the condenser, where heat is rejected to the cooling medium (air or water); the expansion valve, which reduces refrigerant pressure to facilitate evaporation; and the evaporator, where the refrigerant absorbs heat from the load fluid, typically producing chilled water at 42–45°F (5.6–7.2°C).[60] This configuration ensures continuous circulation of the refrigerant, with auxiliary elements like oil separators and controls integrated for reliability, but the focus remains on these primary parts for basic operation.[55] Performance in vapor-compression chillers is evaluated using the Coefficient of Performance (COP), a measure of cooling output per unit of electrical input, typically ranging from 3 to 6 for water-cooled systems, with air-cooled variants at the lower end (2.4–3.06).[61] Capacity control methods, such as hot-gas bypass, modulate output by diverting high-pressure refrigerant vapor directly to the evaporator inlet, maintaining stable operation during partial loads without excessive cycling, though it slightly reduces overall efficiency.[62] Other techniques include variable-speed drives for screw and centrifugal types, enhancing part-load performance.[63] Vapor-compression chillers offer high efficiency driven by electricity, achieving significant energy savings in full-load conditions compared to heat-driven alternatives, with low operational costs in regions with affordable power.[58] However, they present disadvantages including noise and vibration, particularly from reciprocating compressors, necessitating isolation measures in installations to mitigate structural transmission and ensure occupant comfort.[56] Centrifugal and screw types mitigate these issues better, but initial costs can be higher for advanced models.[64]Absorption Chillers
Absorption chillers are thermally driven cooling systems that utilize heat energy, such as waste heat or low-grade thermal sources, to produce chilled water for air conditioning or process cooling, distinguishing them from mechanically driven vapor-compression chillers. These systems operate on an absorption refrigeration cycle, where a refrigerant-absorbent pair replaces the mechanical compressor with thermal separation processes, making them suitable for integration with cogeneration plants or facilities with abundant thermal energy.[65][66] Absorption chillers are classified into subtypes based on the number of effects, which determines their efficiency and required heat input temperature. Single-effect chillers use a single generator and are powered by low-pressure steam (up to 20 psig) or hot water (185–240°F), achieving moderate cooling output from relatively low-grade heat sources. In contrast, double-effect chillers incorporate two generators for higher efficiency, requiring higher-temperature inputs like high-pressure steam (40–150 psig) or direct firing with natural gas or oil, which allows them to produce approximately 40% more chilled water per unit of heat compared to single-effect models.[65][66][67] The performance of these chillers relies on specific refrigerant-absorbent working pairs, with water-lithium bromide (LiBr-H₂O) being the most common for applications producing chilled water above 40°F, such as commercial air conditioning, due to its high affinity for water and non-toxicity. Ammonia-water (NH₃-H₂O) pairs are used for lower-temperature chilling below 40°F, like in cold storage, as ammonia serves as the refrigerant while water acts as the absorbent, offering good solubility but requiring additional components to manage toxicity risks.[65][68][69] In terms of system layout, absorption chillers consist of key components including the absorber, where the absorbent bonds with refrigerant vapor to form a dilute solution; the generator, which applies heat to separate the refrigerant; the condenser and evaporator for phase changes; solution pumps to circulate the mixture; and heat exchangers to recover energy between solution streams. Unlike vapor-compression systems, the core absorption cycle has no moving parts beyond the pumps, relying instead on thermal and pressure differentials, which contributes to their compact design for large capacities and minimal vibration.[66][69][66] Performance metrics for absorption chillers show a coefficient of performance (COP) typically ranging from 0.5 to 1.5, with single-effect models around 0.6–0.75 and double-effect up to 1.0–1.35, reflecting their lower efficiency compared to electric chillers but enabling effective use of waste heat that would otherwise be discarded. They are particularly advantageous in applications where electricity costs are high, such as industrial sites with cogeneration, as they can reduce overall energy expenses by leveraging thermal inputs like exhaust steam.[67][66][65] Key advantages of absorption chillers include quiet operation due to the absence of compressors, the ability to utilize low-grade waste heat for sustainable cooling, and reduced maintenance needs from fewer moving parts, making them ideal for noise-sensitive environments or combined heat and power systems. However, they suffer from lower overall efficiency, higher initial capital costs (often $1,500–$4,500 per ton), and the need for larger cooling towers to handle the exothermic absorption process, along with risks like solution crystallization in LiBr systems.[66][65][66]Operating Principles
Vapor-Compression Cycle
The vapor-compression cycle is the fundamental thermodynamic process employed in vapor-compression chillers to achieve cooling by transferring heat from a low-temperature source to a higher-temperature sink, typically using mechanical work to drive the system. This cycle operates on the principle of repeated phase changes in the refrigerant, exploiting its latent heat of vaporization to absorb and reject heat efficiently. Unlike thermally driven cycles, it relies on electrical power for compression, enabling compact and controllable refrigeration suitable for air conditioning and industrial applications.[70][71] The cycle consists of four primary processes: compression, condensation, expansion, and evaporation. In the compression step, low-pressure refrigerant vapor enters the compressor, where it is compressed to high pressure and temperature, increasing its enthalpy and preparing it for heat rejection; this process requires the majority of the cycle's work input. The high-pressure, superheated vapor then flows to the condenser, where it releases heat to the surroundings, condensing into a high-pressure liquid while maintaining constant pressure. Next, the liquid refrigerant passes through an expansion device, such as a throttle valve, undergoing a sudden pressure drop that reduces its temperature and partially vaporizes it, creating a low-pressure two-phase mixture. Finally, in the evaporator, this mixture absorbs heat from the cooled space, fully evaporating into low-pressure vapor and completing the cycle as it returns to the compressor.[70][71][72] These processes are often visualized on a pressure-enthalpy (P-h) diagram, where the saturation dome separates liquid and vapor regions, and the cycle forms a closed loop. The compression appears as a near-vertical line from low to high pressure, condensation as a horizontal line under the dome from vapor to liquid, expansion as a vertical drop to low pressure, and evaporation as another horizontal line absorbing heat. This diagram illustrates the refrigerant's phase changes and enthalpy differences driving heat transfer, with the enclosed area representing the net work input.[73][74] The performance of the vapor-compression cycle is quantified by the coefficient of performance (COP), defined as the ratio of heat absorbed in the evaporator to the work supplied to the compressor: \text{COP} = \frac{Q_\text{evap}}{W_\text{comp}} where Q_\text{evap} is the refrigeration capacity and W_\text{comp} is the compressor work. In an ideal cycle assuming isentropic compression, reversible heat transfer, and no pressure drops, the COP approaches the Carnot limit for refrigeration, \text{COP}_\text{ideal} = \frac{T_\text{evap}}{T_\text{cond} - T_\text{evap}}, with temperatures in Kelvin. Real cycles exhibit lower COP due to irreversibilities like non-isentropic compression (increasing work input), heat losses, and friction in the expansion process, typically achieving 50-70% of the ideal value depending on operating conditions.[75][76][70] Efficiency improvements in real cycles often involve subcooling and superheating the refrigerant. Subcooling cools the condensed liquid below its saturation temperature at condenser pressure, increasing the refrigerant density and thus the heat absorption capacity in the evaporator without additional work, which raises the COP by 5-15% in typical systems. Superheating heats the evaporator outlet vapor above its saturation temperature, ensuring complete evaporation and preventing liquid ingress to the compressor, though it slightly increases compression work; when optimized, it can enhance overall refrigeration effect and COP by up to 10%. These modifications shift the cycle points on the P-h diagram, enlarging the enclosed area for heat absorption relative to work input.[77][76][78]Absorption Cycle
The absorption refrigeration cycle is a heat-driven thermodynamic process that utilizes thermal energy to achieve cooling, replacing mechanical compression with chemical absorption and desorption mechanisms. It operates on the principle of a working fluid pair consisting of a refrigerant and an absorbent, where the refrigerant is absorbed into the absorbent solution at low pressure and temperature, releasing heat, and then desorbed using external heat input to regenerate the refrigerant vapor for the cooling cycle. This cycle is particularly advantageous for applications where waste heat or low-grade thermal energy is available, as it minimizes electrical power consumption beyond auxiliary pumping.[66] The cycle proceeds through five main steps. In the absorption step, refrigerant vapor from the evaporator is absorbed into a dilute solution of absorbent in the absorber, forming a concentrated solution and releasing latent heat of absorption. The concentrated solution is then pumped to higher pressure. In the generation step, heat is applied to the concentrated solution, causing desorption of the refrigerant vapor while the absorbent remains liquid, producing a dilute solution that is returned to the absorber. The desorbed refrigerant vapor is condensed in the condenser, rejecting heat to the environment and forming a high-pressure liquid. This liquid expands through a throttle valve to low pressure and enters the evaporator, where it evaporates, absorbing heat from the cooled medium to produce the refrigeration effect. Unlike vapor-compression cycles, the absorption process eliminates the need for a mechanical compressor by leveraging affinity between the refrigerant and absorbent.[79][66] Common working pairs for the cycle include lithium bromide-water, where water serves as the refrigerant and lithium bromide as the absorbent; this pair is non-toxic and suitable for air-conditioning applications above 5°C evaporation temperatures. Another pair is ammonia-water, with ammonia as the refrigerant and water as the absorbent, enabling lower evaporation temperatures down to -45°C for industrial refrigeration. The choice of pair depends on the required cooling temperature and system pressure, with lithium bromide-water operating under vacuum to lower the boiling point of water.[79][66] The coefficient of performance (COP) for the absorption cycle is defined as the ratio of the refrigeration effect to the total input energy: \text{COP} = \frac{Q_\text{evap}}{Q_\text{gen} + W_\text{pump}} \approx \frac{Q_\text{evap}}{Q_\text{gen}} where Q_\text{evap} is the heat absorbed in the evaporator, Q_\text{gen} is the heat supplied to the generator, and W_\text{pump} is the negligible pump work. This heat-driven COP typically ranges from 0.6–0.75 for single-effect cycles and 1.0–1.2 for double-effect cycles, approaching the Carnot limit for reversible heat-driven refrigeration processes, which is given by \text{COP}_\text{Carnot} = \left( \frac{T_e}{T_g - T_e} \right) \left( \frac{T_g - T_c}{T_c} \right) under ideal conditions with evaporator temperature T_e, generator temperature T_g, and condenser/absorber temperature T_c. Heat sources for single-effect cycles require temperatures of 80–100°C, such as low-pressure steam or hot water, while double-effect cycles demand 150–180°C for efficiency gains through sequential generation stages.[66][79]Design and Selection
Key Components
Chillers, whether vapor-compression or absorption types, rely on several core components to facilitate heat transfer and refrigeration processes. The evaporator and condenser are fundamental shared elements in both systems. The evaporator absorbs heat from the chilled water or process fluid, typically using shell-and-tube or plate heat exchanger designs to maximize efficiency through direct contact or indirect heat exchange surfaces. Shell-and-tube evaporators are prevalent in larger industrial units due to their robustness and ability to handle high fluid volumes, while plate types offer compact footprints suitable for space-constrained applications. The condenser, in contrast, rejects absorbed heat to the environment, available in air-cooled configurations with finned coils for direct atmospheric dissipation or water-cooled variants using cooling towers for enhanced thermal performance in water-abundant settings. Type-specific components distinguish the operational mechanisms of each chiller category. In vapor-compression chillers, the compressor serves as the primary driver, elevating refrigerant pressure and temperature to enable the cycle; common variants include screw compressors for variable capacity control in mid-sized systems and centrifugal compressors for large-capacity applications, typically 200 tons and above, leveraging impeller dynamics for efficient compression. Absorption chillers, however, replace the compressor with a generator and absorber assembly, where the generator uses heat—often from steam or hot water—to separate the refrigerant (typically water) from the absorbent (lithium bromide solution), and the absorber facilitates reabsorption under vacuum conditions; these can employ crystal or falling-film configurations for improved heat and mass transfer efficiency. Auxiliary components ensure system reliability and precise control. Expansion devices, such as thermostatic expansion valves (TXVs), regulate refrigerant flow into the evaporator by sensing superheat levels, maintaining optimal charge and preventing liquid slugging. Pumps circulate chilled water through the evaporator and condenser water loops, with variable-speed options enhancing energy efficiency, while control systems integrate sensors for temperature, pressure, and flow monitoring to enable automated adjustments and fault detection. Material selection and maintenance practices are critical for longevity, as chillers operate in corrosive environments from refrigerants and water treatments. Components often incorporate copper alloys or stainless steel for heat exchangers to resist pitting and scaling, with coatings or inhibitors mitigating galvanic corrosion. Common failures include fouling from mineral deposits or biological growth in evaporators and condensers, which reduces heat transfer rates by up to 30% if unaddressed, necessitating regular cleaning and water quality management.Selection Criteria
Selecting a chiller involves a thorough load assessment to match the system's capacity to the application's cooling requirements. Peak cooling demand represents the maximum instantaneous load, typically used for initial sizing to ensure reliability during high-demand periods, while average demand reflects the typical operational load over time, which is often lower and influences energy efficiency considerations. For multi-chiller setups, diversity factors account for the non-simultaneous peaking of loads across zones or units, commonly ranging from 75% to 85%, allowing for optimized total capacity without oversizing the system.[80] Efficiency metrics guide the evaluation of chiller performance under varying conditions. The Integrated Part Load Value (IPLV) provides a weighted average efficiency metric for variable loads, calculated based on operation at 100%, 75%, 50%, and 25% capacities using standard conditions defined by AHRI Standard 550/590, emphasizing part-load performance since chillers rarely operate at full load.[81] Life-cycle cost analysis incorporates initial purchase, installation, energy consumption, maintenance, and replacement costs to determine long-term value, often favoring chillers with high IPLV ratings in applications with fluctuating demands.[82] Site-specific factors significantly influence chiller selection, particularly in industrial settings. Power availability dictates the feasibility of electric vapor-compression chillers versus absorption types that may use steam or gas, with industrial sites requiring assessment of electrical infrastructure capacity to avoid upgrades.[83] Space constraints affect chiller footprint and layout, while water quality impacts condenser performance in water-cooled systems, necessitating treatment to prevent scaling or corrosion.[84] For industrial applications prioritizing uptime, redundancy configurations such as N+1—providing one additional unit beyond the minimum required—ensure continuous operation during maintenance or failures, supporting high-reliability needs like 99%+ availability.[85] Economic tools aid in comparing chiller options and validating designs. Payback period calculations for absorption versus vapor-compression chillers vary widely, often 3-7 years when utilizing waste heat sources due to lower operating expenses offsetting higher upfront costs, though longer periods up to 13 years can occur in specialized configurations without free heat sources.[86][87] Simulation software like Carrier's Hourly Analysis Program (HAP) models annual energy use, load profiles, and system interactions to simulate performance and support sizing decisions.[88]Refrigerants and Sustainability
Common Refrigerants
Chillers employ a variety of refrigerants depending on the system type, with vapor-compression chillers primarily using synthetic hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs), and natural fluids, while absorption chillers rely on specific refrigerant-absorbent pairs.[89] In vapor-compression chillers, HCFC-22 (R-22) was historically common but has been phased out from production and import by 2020 due to its ozone-depleting properties. R-22 has a boiling point of -40.8°C and is classified as A1 by ASHRAE standards, indicating low toxicity and non-flammability.[90][91] HFCs such as R-134a and R-410A are widely used replacements in modern vapor-compression systems. R-134a, with a boiling point of -26.3°C, is classified as A1 and dominates in large centrifugal chillers due to its favorable thermodynamic properties and compatibility with system components.[90][91][92] R-410A, a blend with a boiling point of -48.5°C, also holds an A1 classification and is prevalent in smaller to medium-capacity chillers for its higher efficiency in screw and scroll compressors.[90][91][93] Natural refrigerants offer alternatives with distinct properties. Ammonia (R-717) has a boiling point of -33.3°C and is classified as B2L by ASHRAE, signifying higher toxicity and mild flammability, yet it is favored in industrial chillers for its low cost and excellent heat transfer efficiency.[90][91][94] Carbon dioxide (R-744), with a sublimation point of -78.5°C, is A1-rated and used in transcritical cycles for specialized high-pressure applications in chillers.[90][91] The following table summarizes key properties of selected vapor-compression refrigerants:| Refrigerant | Type | Boiling Point (°C) | ASHRAE Safety Class | Common Usage in Chillers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R-22 | HCFC | -40.8 | A1 | Historical, phased out [90][91] |
| R-134a | HFC | -26.3 | A1 | Centrifugal, dominant [90][91][92] |
| R-410A | HFC Blend | -48.5 | A1 | Screw/scroll, medium capacity [90][91][93] |
| R-717 (Ammonia) | Natural | -33.3 | B2L | Industrial, low-cost [90][91][94] |
| R-744 (CO2) | Natural | -78.5 (subl.) | A1 | Transcritical, specialized [90][91] |