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An absorption chiller, also known as an absorption refrigerator, is a cooling system that uses a heat source, in lieu of electricity and a compressor, to drive the device. The systems are commonly used where excess heat is available and are considered a type of heat recovery device. Trigeneration, production of electricity, hot water, and air conditioning, is also possible because of the design of the system and the ease of which it can be integrated into other building systems. Absorption chillers use no moving parts and are powered by heat alone.
Process
Absorption chillers use the process of evaporation, instead of Charles' Law (as in the case of compressor driven systems), to generate coolth. The process uses a heat source, a tubing and container system, three substances (ammonia, hydrogen gas, and water) and goes something like this (described below is a 'small ammonia' refrigeration cycle - for reference):
Above is a reference diagram to help explain the process:
For more information please visit the original Wikipedia article.
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August 1st, 2008 at 11:24 PM
refrigeration heat recovery
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