The document discusses evaporative cooling and the Maisotsenko cycle. The Maisotsenko cycle uses heat exchange and evaporative cooling processes to cool air to near the dew point temperature, using less water and achieving greater efficiency than conventional evaporative cooling systems. An experimental Maisotsenko cooler achieved air temperatures of 21-22°C using 55% humidity. Independent air flow control allowed up to 2.5°C further cooling and 40% water savings.
The document discusses evaporative cooling and the Maisotsenko cycle. The Maisotsenko cycle uses heat exchange and evaporative cooling processes to cool air to near the dew point temperature, using less water and achieving greater efficiency than conventional evaporative cooling systems. An experimental Maisotsenko cooler achieved air temperatures of 21-22°C using 55% humidity. Independent air flow control allowed up to 2.5°C further cooling and 40% water savings.
The document discusses evaporative cooling and the Maisotsenko cycle. The Maisotsenko cycle uses heat exchange and evaporative cooling processes to cool air to near the dew point temperature, using less water and achieving greater efficiency than conventional evaporative cooling systems. An experimental Maisotsenko cooler achieved air temperatures of 21-22°C using 55% humidity. Independent air flow control allowed up to 2.5°C further cooling and 40% water savings.
The document discusses evaporative cooling and the Maisotsenko cycle. The Maisotsenko cycle uses heat exchange and evaporative cooling processes to cool air to near the dew point temperature, using less water and achieving greater efficiency than conventional evaporative cooling systems. An experimental Maisotsenko cooler achieved air temperatures of 21-22°C using 55% humidity. Independent air flow control allowed up to 2.5°C further cooling and 40% water savings.
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Evaporative cooling
Evaporative cooling is a method of producing
cold air, suitable for air conditioning applications. advantages: reduced electricity consumption by up to 80% exemption from hazardous refrigerants.
constructed an experimental evaporative cooling cycle similar to Maisotsenko cycle This cycle uses a novel geometry to maximize cooling efficiency. The advantages of the Maisotsenko cycle against conventional evaporative cooling systems are: possibility of achieving lower temperatures, generally below the wet bulb temperature of the environment, greater efficiency and reduced water consumption low pressure drops, in the absence of porous medium.
The results of the experimental procedure demonstrated the great effectiveness of this device, producing air at 21 o C - 22 o C and humidity of about 55%. The possibility of improving the cooler with independent control air supply was examined, in order to show if any further water savings and further reduction of the air outlet temperature happen. It has been proven that the flow rate reduction by 50% causes a decrease in the air outlet temperature by up to 2.5 o C, thus allowing the cooler to cover more cooling loads. This reduction also leads to 40% water savings MAISOTSENKO CYCLE FOR COOLING PROCESSES
ABSTRACT The Maisotsenko Cooling cycle combines the thermodynamic processes of heat exchange and evaporative cooling in a unique indirect evaporative cooler resulting in product temperatures that approach the dew point temperature (not the wet bulb temperature) of the working gas. This cycle utilizes the enthalpy difference of a gas, such as air, at its dew point temperature and the same gas saturated at a higher temperature. This enthalpy difference or potential energy is used to reject the heat from the product. Consider the cooling gas to be air and the liquid to be water; the Maisotsenko Cycle allows the product fluid to be cooled in temperature ideally to the dew point temperature of the incoming air. This is due to the precooling of the air before passing it into the heat-rejection stream where water is evaporated. For purposes of this paper, the product fluid is air. At no time is water evaporated into the product airstream. When exhausted, the heat rejection airstream or exhaust air is saturated and has a temperature less than the incoming air, but greater then the wet bulb temperature. This cycle is realized in a single apparatus with a much higher heat flux and lower pressure drop than has been realizable in the past due to its efficient design.
temperature reduction and cooling effectiveness thermoelectric unit was integrated in to the evaporative cooling system containing porous ceramic evaporators Typical test results showed that the cold side temperature of thermoelectric unit was 5Deg.C lower and the hot side was 10Deg Direct evaporative cooling is often associated with the rise in relative humidity which may result in uncomfortable feeling due to unwanted increase in moisture Indirect evaporative cooling offers a solution but still requires improvements in the effectiveness. There is also need for using cheap and readily available materials for the construction, requiring simple fabrication technology without very complex engineering infrastructure. Stirling engine The production of electricity from conventional sources contributes to the global climate change, degradation of life quality and other socioeconomic problems arising from the management of mineral resources. Specifically in Greece, an old, inefficient and polluting central power system is still used. Blackouts are common in summer, as a result of the great seasonal load imbalance with peak load during the summer tourist season.
The recent EU directives promote the upgrade of the existing electrical generation central systems to dispersed systems in which the renewable energy sources will have a dominant role. For the particular climatic conditions of Greece, the use of solar energy for the coupled heat and power generation may prove to be economically viable.
The combination of Stirling engines with solar concentrating collectors is a common method of cogeneration and trigeneration. Such solar systems are already installed and operate (50 kW in Saudi Arabia, 9 kW to 10 kW Germany and Spain).
The Laboratory of Applied Thermodynamics NTUA has installed a Stirling engine for research activities. The power of this unit is combined with natural gas and its products are electricity and heat. A commercial application of this machine would sell the electricity to the grid and would use the heat to cover its own heating / cooling demand. Research
The main topics concerning the Laboratory of Applied Thermodynamics are: Design, analysis, simulation and optimization of thermodynamic systems and cycles, Design, analysis, simulation and optimization of air conditioning systems, evaporative light cycle with liquid and solid absorbents, Design, analysis, simulation and optimization of heat exchangers, Simulation and optimization of air conditioning units with solar thermal systems, Design, analysis, simulation and optimization of refrigeration units and combined units injector absorption - injector, Thermodynamic analysis of irreversible processes biphasic binary mixture. The above topics are applied in the design of the following systems:
Open cycle evaporative air conditioning systems with liquid desiccant, Open cycle evaporative air conditioning systems with solid desiccant, Closed cycle evaporative cooling systems, Solar air conditioning, Stirling engines, Reverse osmosis desalination systems, Thermal desalination systems.
NRG4CAST Energy Forecast Short description - NRG4Cast is developing real-time management, analytics and forecasting services for energy distribution networks in urban/rural communities. - Information regarding network topology and devices, energy demand and consumption, environmental data and energy prices data will be analysed. - A software module pipeline will be developed, providing prediction and the decision support system based on network monitoring, anomaly detection, route cause analysis, trend detection, planning and optimisation. - The platform will be tested in two case studies. The first one consists of a scenario with Miren-Slovenia, Aachen-Germany and Torino-Italy and refers to heating, cooling, public lighting, traffic management and electric cars charging. The second one is in NTUA campus in Zografou, referring to heating, cooling and electricity consumption of the Campus area.