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Introduction to Food Engineering

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Food Engineering"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Food Engineering
Refrigeration Introduction to Food Engineering

2 Ice Box Ice -> water, latent heat = 333 kJ/kg

3 Refrigerant : liquid -> vapor

4 Selection of Refrigerant
1. Latent heat of vaporization High value Small amount needed per unit time 2. Condensing pressure High pressure needs expenses on heavy construction of condenser & piping 3. Freezing temperature Should be below evaporator temperature

5 Selection... 4. Critical temperature 5. Toxicity, must be non-toxic
Temperature that refrigerant vapor cannot be liquefied, should be high 5. Toxicity, must be non-toxic 6. Flammability – nonflammable 7. Corrosiveness – noncorrosive 8. Chemical stability - stable

6 Selection... 9. Detection of leaks – easy to detect 10. Cost
11. Environmental impact

7 Commonly used refrigerants
Ammonia CFCs Freon 12 = dichloro difluoromethane Freon 22 = monochloro difluoromethane Stable – long life in lower atmostphere Migrate to upper atmostphere, Cl split off by UV, reacts with ozone -> deplete More UV

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9 Alternatives HCFs Less stable Hydrofluorocarbons
hydrochlorofluorocarbons

10 Components of a refrigeration system

11 Evaporator

12

13 Compressor

14 Compressor

15 Compressor

16 Condensor

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19 Expansion Valve

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25 Changes d saturated liquid  condensation temp
Passing through expansion valve Pressure & temp drop Some liquid -> gas Liquid/gas mixture enters evaporator coils at e Completely vaporize, -> saturated vapor (gain additional heat)

26 Changes... Vapors enter compressor
Compressed -> high pressure, temp increase Superheated refrigerant Superheated vapor cooled by air or water in condenser Saturated liquid

27 Pressure-Enthalpy Charts
Enthalpy H = U + PV H = enthalpy (kJ/kg) U = internal energy (kJ/kg) P = pressure (kPa) V = specific volume (m3/kg)

28 Evaporator & Condenser Compression : work done Expansion valve
Enthalpy change, pressure constant Compression : work done Increase enthalpy, increase pressure Expansion valve Constant enthalpy Flow from high P -> low P

29 Pressure-Enthalpy Charts

30 condenser compressor evaporator

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32 Cooling Load Rate of heat energy removal from a given space or object to lower temp. to a desired level One ton of refrigeration = latent heat of fusion of 1 ton of ice = 288,000 Btu/24 hr = 303,852 kJ/24 hr = kW

33 Cooling load calculation must consider heat of respiration, walls, floor, doors, etc.

34 Example Calculate cooling load caused by heat of evolution of 2000 kg cabbage stored at 5 °C. Given heat of evolution of cabbage at 5 °C = 28 – 63 W/Mg Total heat evolution (2000 kg)(63W/Mg)(1Mg/1000 kg) = 126 W

35 Calculations Compression qw = work done on refrigerant (kW)

36 Condenser Evaporator Rate of heat exchanged in condenser
Rate of heat accepted by refrigerant

37 Coefficient of performance
Indicate efficiency of the system. Ratio between heat absorbed by refrigerant in evaporator to heat equivalence of the energy supplied to the compressor

38 Refrigerant flow rate Depends on cooling load & refrigeration effect
q = total cooling load (kW) m = mass flow rate (kg/s)

39 Example Cold storage room (2 °C) uses Freon-12 as refrigerant. Evaporator temp = -5 °C, Condenser temp = 40 °C, refrigeration load = 20 tons, calculate m, compressor power requirement and C.O.P. Assume saturated conditions and compressor efficiency 85 %.

40 From chart Evaporator pressure = 260 kPa Condenser pressure = 950 kPa
H1 = 238 kJ/kg H2 = 350 kJ/kg H3 = 395 kJ/kg (1 ton of refrigeration = 303,852 kJ/24 hr)

41 qw = m(H3 – H2), 85 % efficiency
= kW = 4.48

42 Slower m, less power, higher C.O.P.
Assume vapors leave evaporator 10 °C super-heated, liquid from condenser is subcooled 15 °C. m = 0.54 kg/s qw = 15.9 kW C.O.P. = 5.2 Slower m, less power, higher C.O.P.


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