Thermoacoustic Refrigeration
Thermoacoustic Refrigeration
Thermoacoustic Refrigeration
REFRIGERATION
CONTENTS
Introduction
Basics of Refrigeration
Basics of Thermoacoustic Refrigeration
Thermoacoustics
Main Parts
Case Study
Advantages, Disadvantages and Applications of TAR
Conclusion
INTRODUCTION
Over the past two decades, physicists and engineers
have been working on a class of heat engines and
compression-driven refrigerators that use no
oscillating pistons, oil seals or lubricants.
Thermo acoustic devices take advantage of sound
waves reverberating within them to convert a
temperature differential into mechanical energy or
mechanical energy into a temperature differential.
STEVEN L. GARRETT
Leading Researcher
United Technologies
Corporation Professor of
Acoustics
The Pennsylvania State
University.
He invented the
thermoacoustic
refrigerator in the year
1992 and that TAR was
used in the space shuttle
Discovery(STS-42).
BASICS OF REFRIGERATION
A refrigerant is a compound used
in a heat cycle that undergoes a
phase change from a gas to a
liquid and back.
For example, let us assume that
the refrigerant being used is pure
ammonia, which boils at
-27
degrees F. And this is what
happens to keep the refrigerator
cool:
1. The
compressor
compresses
the
ammonia gas. The compressed gas
heats up as it is pressurized (orange).
2. The coils on the back of the
refrigerator let the hot ammonia gas
dissipate its heat. The ammonia gas
condenses into ammonia liquid (dark
blue) at high pressure.
3. The high-pressure ammonia liquid
flows through the expansion valve. The
expansion valve is a small hole. On one
side of it, is high-pressure ammonia
liquid. On the other side of the hole is
a low-pressure area.
4. The liquid ammonia immediately boils
and
vaporizes
(light
blue),
its
temperature dropping to
-27 F. This
makes the inside of the refrigerator
cold.
5. The cold ammonia gas is sucked up by
the compressor, and the cycle repeats.
D I S A D VA N TA G E S O F
CONVENTIONAL
R E F R I G E R AT O R
Uses harmful refrigerants like ammonia, CFCs and HFCs
Refrigerants if leaked causes the depletion in the ozone
layers.
Refrigerants are costly.
The moving parts like the compressors require lubrication.
Leakage of refrigerant may result in adverse human
health effects
including
cancers, cataracts, immune
system deficits, and respiratory effects, as well as
diminish food supplies and promote increases in vector
borne diseases.
BASICS OF
THERMOACOUSTIC REFRIGERATION
The principle can be imagined as a loud speaker
creating high amplitude sound waves that can
compress refrigerant allowing heat absorption
The researches have exploited the fact that sound
waves travel by compressing and expanding the gas
they are generated in.
Suppose that the above said wave is traveling through
a tube.
Now, a temperature gradient can be generated by
putting a stack of plates in the right place in the tube,
in which sound waves are bouncing around.
10
is
inherently
associated
with
pattern
is
generated
in
an
acoustic
resonator.
The reverse effect also exists: when a large
enough temperature gradient is imposed to the
wall, net heat is absorbed and an acoustic wave
is generated, so that heat is converted to work.
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THERMOACOUSTICS
Thermoacoustics combines the branches of acoustics and
thermodynamics together to move heat by using sound.
While acoustics is primarily concerned with the macroscopic
effects of sound transfer like coupled pressure and motion
oscillations, thermoacoustics focuses on the microscopic
temperature oscillations that accompany these pressure
changes.
Thermoacoustics
takes
advantage
of
these
pressure
oscillations to move heat on a macroscopic level.
This results in a large temperature difference between the hot
and cold sides of the device and causes refrigeration.
12
CARNOT CYCLE
The most efficient cycle of
thermodynamics.
The Carnot cycle uses gas
in a closed chamber to
extract
work
from
the
system.
13
THERMOACOUSTIC CYCLE
The figure traces the basic
thermoacoustic cycle for a
packet of gas, a collection
of gas molecules that act
and move together.
Starting from point 1, the
packet
of
gas
is
compressed and moves to
the left.
As
the
packet
is
compressed,
the
sound
wave does work onFigure
the
4.3 THERMOACOUSTIC REFRIGERATION CYCLE (From
Reference 2)
packet of gas, providing
the
power
for
the
refrigerator.
14
gas
compression,
ejects
the
heat
now
higher
than
the
phase
is
the
moving
the
heat
15
Finally,
in
step
4,
the
from
the
cold
reservoir.
Ant
the
repeats
heat
and
transfer
hence
the
thermoacoustic
refrigeration cycle.
Figure 4.3 THERMOACOUSTIC
REFRIGERATION
CYCLE (From Reference 2)
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THERMOACOUSTIC REFRIGERATOR
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MAIN PARTS
Two main parts are in the TAR
1. Driver
Houses the Loudspeaker
2. Resonator
Houses the gas
The hot and cold heat
exchangers
Houses the Stack
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LOUDSPEAKERS
20
loudspeaker
(or
"speaker")
is
an
21
STACK
It is also called as regenerator.
The most important piece of a thermoacoustic
device is the stack.
The stack consists of a large number of closely
spaced surfaces that are aligned parallel to the
to the resonator tube.
In a usual resonator tube, heat transfer occurs
between the walls of cylinder and the gas.
22
stacks
consist
of
honeycombed
plastic
23
HEAT EXCHANGER
Heat exchangers
are devices used
to transfer heat
energy from one
fluid to another.
25
built
for
efficient
refrigeration,
conditioning,
power
air
plants,
petroleum
natural
gas
refineries,
processing,
and
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CASE STUDY
SPACE
THERMOACOUS
TIC
REFRIGERATOR
(STAR)
27
to
operate
autonomously
outside
was
not
very
efficient
thermoacoustic
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SPECIFICATIONS
Length of the tube is 35 cm.
Diameter of the tube is 3.9 cm
Length of the stack is 7.9 cm
Diameter of the stack is 3.8 cm
Gas used is 97.2% Helium and 2.7%
Xenon
Heat pumping capacity is 50 Watts.
Refrigeration Temperature is 12C
Commercial Loudspeaker is used.
Speaker operates at 135 Hz and 100
W.
30
ADVANTAGES OF TAR
No moving parts for the process, so very reliable and
a long life span.
Environmentally friendly working medium (air, noble
gas).
The use of air or noble gas as working medium offers
a large window of applications because there are no
phase transitions.
Use of simple materials with no special requirements,
which are commercially available in large quantities
and therefore relatively cheap.
On the same technology base a large variety of
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32
DISADVANTAGES OF TAR
Efficiency:
currently
Thermo
less
acoustic
efficient
than
refrigeration
the
is
traditional
refrigerators.
Lack
of
suppliers
producing
customized
components.
Lack of interest and funding from the industry due
to their concentration on developing alternative
gases to CFCs.
Talent Bottleneck: There are not enough people
who have expertise on the combination of relevant
disciplines such as acoustic, heat exchanger design
33
IMPROVEMENTS MADE
In
order
to
overcome
the
drawbacks,
some
later.
This
component
can
increase
the
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APPLICATIONS
Liquefaction of natural gas:
Burning natural gas in a thermo acoustic engine
generates acoustic energy. This acoustic energy is
used in a thermo acoustic heat pump to liquefy
natural gas.
Chip
cooling:
In this case a piezoelectric element generates the
sound wave. A thermo acoustic heat pump cools
the chip.
35
wave
in
heated
thermo
acoustic
CONCLUSION
Thermo acoustic engines and refrigerators were already
being
considered
few
years
ago
for
specialized
achievements
of
the
former
are
certainly
37
REFERENCES
http://hyperphysics.phyastr.gsu.edu/hbase/thermo/carnot.html.
Daniel A. Russell and Pontus Weibull, Tabletop
thermoacoustic refrigerator for demonstrations, Am.
J. Phys. 70 (12), December 2002.
G. W. Swift, Thermoacoustic engines and
refrigerators, Phys. Today 48, 22-28 (1995).
http://www.howstuffworks.com/stirling-engine.htm.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnot_cycle.
Chilling at Ben & Jerrys: Cleaner, Greener. Ken
Brown. Available:
http://www.thermoacousticscorp.com/news/index.cfm/
ID/4.htm. 17 July 2006.
S. L. Garrett and S. Backhaus, The power of sound,
Am. Sci. 88, 516
525 (2000).
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THANK YOU
PRESENTED
BY
NIMALAN I
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