GAS - Vapor Mixtures and Air-Conditioning: Mehmet Kanoglu
GAS - Vapor Mixtures and Air-Conditioning: Mehmet Kanoglu
Chapter 14
GAS–VAPOR MIXTURES
AND AIR-CONDITIONING
Mehmet Kanoglu
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Objectives
• Differentiate between dry air and atmospheric air.
• Define and calculate the specific and relative
humidity of atmospheric air.
• Calculate the dew-point temperature of
atmospheric air.
• Relate the adiabatic saturation temperature and
wet-bulb temperatures of atmospheric air.
• Use the psychrometric chart as a tool to
determine the properties of atmospheric air.
• Apply the principles of the conservation of mass
and energy to various air-conditioning processes.
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DRY AND ATMOSPHERIC AIR
Atmospheric air: Air in the atmosphere containing
some water vapor (or moisture).
Dry air: Air that contains no water vapor.
Water vapor in the air plays a major role in human
comfort. Therefore, it is an important consideration
in air-conditioning applications.
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Most air-conditioning processes can be modeled as steady-flow
processes with the following general mass and energy balances:
Mass balance
Energy balance
The work term usually consists of the fan work input, which is
small relative to the other terms in the energy balance relation.
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Simple Heating and Cooling ( = constant)
Many residential heating systems consist of a stove, a heat pump, or an electric
resistance heater. The air in these systems is heated by circulating it through a
duct that contains the tubing for the hot gases or the electric resistance wires.
Cooling can be accomplished by passing the air over some coils through which a
refrigerant or chilled water flows.
Heating and cooling appear as a horizontal line since no moisture is added to or
removed from the air.
During simple cooling, specific
Dry air mass balance
humidity remains constant, but
Water mass balance relative humidity increases.
Energy balance
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Cooling with Dehumidification
The specific humidity of air remains constant during a simple cooling process,
but its relative humidity increases. If the relative humidity reaches undesirably
high levels, it may be necessary to remove some moisture from the air, that is,
to dehumidify it. This requires cooling the air below its dew-point temperature.
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In desert (hot and dry) climates, we can Evaporative Cooling
avoid the high cost of conventional
cooling by using evaporative coolers, This process is essentially identical
also known as swamp coolers. to adiabatic saturation process.
As water evaporates, the latent heat of
vaporization is absorbed from the water
body and the surrounding air. As a result,
both the water and the air are cooled
during the process.
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Natural-draft cooling tower: It looks like a large chimney and works like an
ordinary chimney. The air in the tower has a high water-vapor content, and thus
it is lighter than the outside air. Consequently, the light air in the tower rises, and
the heavier outside air fills the vacant space, creating an airflow from the bottom
of the tower to the top.
Spray pond: The warm water is sprayed into the air and is cooled by the air as
it falls into the pond,
Cooling pond: Dumping the waste heat into a still pond, which is basically a
large artificial lake open to the atmosphere.
A natural-
A spray pond.
draft
cooling
tower.
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Summary
• Dry and atmospheric air
• Specific and relative humidity of air
• Dew-point temperature
• Adiabatic saturation and wet-bulb temperatures
• The psychrometric chart
• Human comfort and air-conditioning
• Air-conditioning processes
Simple heating and cooling
Heating with humidification
Cooling with dehumidification
Evaporative cooling
Adiabatic mixing of airstreams
Wet cooling towers
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