toast26
Chemical
- Feb 28, 2011
- 2
I’ve just started looking into chillers, so my knowledge is pretty minimal. One thing in particular is bothering me. From what I read, reducing the chilled water return temperature will reduce the chiller load. I understand this, because if your temperature difference from the return and supply is less, then your tonnage will drop.
What confuses me is why this is important? It seems to me that the tonnage of the chiller really doesn’t matter, just the supply temperature, since that is what will doing the cooling in the cooling loop. If we have the same flow rate through the chiller, then the output temperature seems to be all that matters (or will it not be possible to keep the flow rate the same?).
Why I’m thinking this: I was wondering whether or not it would make sense to run a heat exchanger to cool the water before it enters the chiller.
What confuses me is why this is important? It seems to me that the tonnage of the chiller really doesn’t matter, just the supply temperature, since that is what will doing the cooling in the cooling loop. If we have the same flow rate through the chiller, then the output temperature seems to be all that matters (or will it not be possible to keep the flow rate the same?).
Why I’m thinking this: I was wondering whether or not it would make sense to run a heat exchanger to cool the water before it enters the chiller.