- Joined
- Oct 20, 2014
- Messages
- 159
How come nobody has a made a miniature refrigerant closed loop system? Imagine the possibilities! A very effective and tiny battery powered drink cooler that blows the socks off of thermoelectric coolers and has all kinds of awesome mechanical and electrical components.
If you dont completely understand how your typical compressor based refrigerant system works, like in your fridge or your car AC, think of it like this:
You know those cans of compressed air? Well alot of them are actually Freon. If you point them upside down you can spray liquid freon out which has some very low boiling point, something like -50F.
And it basically instantaneously freezes whatever you spray it on.
Thats exactly how closed loop refrigerant systems work. Well basically anyway. The key difference is that they are contained so the Freon doesnt just blow away in the wind and disappear. You need a little heat exchanger to dump the heat to the outside world and you need something to act as a metering device, like an orifice.
A simple one could be an evaporator with a piston attached and a certain amount of freon inside. The freon boils, cooling the evaporator. At some point, all the heat the freon is going to absorb has been absorbed, and you can determine that via pressure and temperature. At that point, you use the piston to increase the pressure in the evaporator and force the heat to be pumped out backwards through the evaporator into the outside world. Repeat.
Or you could literally make a miniature replica of a closed loop modern AC system..including all the bells and whistles like a miniature compressor (copy an automotive one with reed valves and pistons), an orifice for metering, and mini evaporators and compressors.
Seems like the possibilities are endless. Plus you can end up with a useful device, and there are some interesting mechanical engineering aspects to figure out.
If you dont completely understand how your typical compressor based refrigerant system works, like in your fridge or your car AC, think of it like this:
You know those cans of compressed air? Well alot of them are actually Freon. If you point them upside down you can spray liquid freon out which has some very low boiling point, something like -50F.
And it basically instantaneously freezes whatever you spray it on.
Thats exactly how closed loop refrigerant systems work. Well basically anyway. The key difference is that they are contained so the Freon doesnt just blow away in the wind and disappear. You need a little heat exchanger to dump the heat to the outside world and you need something to act as a metering device, like an orifice.
A simple one could be an evaporator with a piston attached and a certain amount of freon inside. The freon boils, cooling the evaporator. At some point, all the heat the freon is going to absorb has been absorbed, and you can determine that via pressure and temperature. At that point, you use the piston to increase the pressure in the evaporator and force the heat to be pumped out backwards through the evaporator into the outside world. Repeat.
Or you could literally make a miniature replica of a closed loop modern AC system..including all the bells and whistles like a miniature compressor (copy an automotive one with reed valves and pistons), an orifice for metering, and mini evaporators and compressors.
Seems like the possibilities are endless. Plus you can end up with a useful device, and there are some interesting mechanical engineering aspects to figure out.