In conventional vapor compression systems,
electronic expansion valves (EXVs) are used for refrigerant flow control.
Subcooled refrigerant enters the expansion device and is expanded to the
evaporation pressure while the valve opening is modified to achieve the desired
mass flowrate.
The relationship between the inlet and outlet
conditions, the opening, and the mass flowrate has been extensively studied,
e.g. by Park et al. (2007) and appropriate empirical correlations have been
developed. However, for certain operating conditions (e.g. low refrigerant
charge) or applications that generally have two-phase inlet conditions (e.g.
balancing valves used in a hybrid control scheme as proposed by Kim et al.
(2008)), these correlations are not applicable, since even low inlet vapor
fractions lead to a significant reduction of the valve mass flowrate at a given
opening.
This paper proposes a continuous correlation
that can be used for both two-phase and subcooled valve inlet conditions. The
benefit of the continuity is that there is a smooth transition between
subcooled and two-phase inlet conditions, which is essential for control and
simulation purposes. The new correlation employs the Buckingham-Pi theorem as
proposed by Buckingham (1914). The selected dimensionless Pi-groups describe
opening of the valve, subcooling, inlet and outlet pressures, driving pressure
difference across the valve, inlet density, surface tension, and viscosity.
The data that was used to determine the
coefficients of the correlation was taken on a dedicated valve test stand,
which was sized for the per-circuit capacity of a typical 5-ton R410A heat pump
and a 3-ton R404A large room cooling system. The purpose of these tests was
mainly to map the valves for the low pressure drops, high inlet qualities and
large valve openings that occur when they are used as balancing valves in a
hybrid control approach. Two commercially available valves of different rated
capacity were tested.
Due to the much higher valve capacity for
subcooled inlet conditions, valve openings of less than 5% occurred in that
case. This led to an accuracy of the correlation for these points that is less
than what typically can be found for correlations with subcooled inlet
conditions in the open literature. However, for two-phase flow inlet
conditions, the resulting RMS of 1.0 g/s for the 8-PI correlation is
sufficiently small to use the approach for estimating the refrigerant mass flow
and using the EXV as a virtual mass flow sensor. The limitations of this approach in
practical applications, as well as possible applications in fault detection and
diagnostics are shown for application as balancing valves within a 5-ton R410A
heat pump and a 3-ton R404A large room cooling system.
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