heinasirkka
Mechanical
- Dec 8, 2016
- 22
Dear forum users,
I'm working on a closed refrigerant loop built for university experimental research. It has some unconventional and flawed features. There is a liquid receiver at the pump's (sliding vane pump) liquid suction line (thus, between the condenser and the pump). The receiver is to provide enough liquid to the pump. The design has a flaw since the receiver is expected to drain the liquid from the condenser and we'll lose the condensate levels, and will get very limited subcooling.
1 - We were thinking to connect the vertical receiver only from the bottom (liquid part), instead of inline series connection at the liquid suction line. By those means the condensate will not travel to the receiver directly, as we assume.
2- Another option can be putting a flow restriction (e.g. selenoid valve) means before the liquid receiver, as far as the available suction head is not too low.
I don't have a lot of experience in this. Can these solutions work by any chance? Any comments on these solutions are very much appreciated!
Greetings
I'm working on a closed refrigerant loop built for university experimental research. It has some unconventional and flawed features. There is a liquid receiver at the pump's (sliding vane pump) liquid suction line (thus, between the condenser and the pump). The receiver is to provide enough liquid to the pump. The design has a flaw since the receiver is expected to drain the liquid from the condenser and we'll lose the condensate levels, and will get very limited subcooling.
1 - We were thinking to connect the vertical receiver only from the bottom (liquid part), instead of inline series connection at the liquid suction line. By those means the condensate will not travel to the receiver directly, as we assume.
2- Another option can be putting a flow restriction (e.g. selenoid valve) means before the liquid receiver, as far as the available suction head is not too low.
I don't have a lot of experience in this. Can these solutions work by any chance? Any comments on these solutions are very much appreciated!
Greetings