Trane TRG-TRC016-EN Air Conditioner User Manual


 
TRG-TRC016-EN 75
period three
System Variations
notes
“Free” Cooling
There are a number of methods that use cool outdoor conditions to reduce
cooling energy costs. They are often referred to as free cooling because they
reduce or eliminate the energy consumed by the compressor. They are not truly
free, but really reduced-cost cooling options.
The most prevalent method is the use of an airside economizer. When the
temperature, or enthalpy, of the outdoor air is low enough, the outdoor-air and
return-air dampers in the air handler are modulated and the cooler outdoor air
is used to reduce the temperature of air entering the cooling coil. This can
reduce or totally eliminate the requirement for mechanical cooling for much
of the year in many climates.
In water-cooled systems, there are also several types of waterside
economizers. The most direct method, but typically the least desirable, is to
use a strainer cycle. In this system, the condenser- and chilled-water systems
are connected. When the outdoor wet-bulb temperature is low enough, cold
water from the cooling tower is routed directly into the chilled-water loop.
Although the strainer cycle is the most efficient waterside economizer option, it
greatly increases the risk of fouling in the chilled-water system and cooling coils
with the same type of contamination that is common in open-cooling-tower
systems. A strainer or filter can be used to minimize this contamination, but the
potential for fouling prevents widespread use of the strainer-cycle system.
“Free” Cooling
Airside economizer
Waterside economizer
Strainer cycle
Plate-and-frame heat exchanger
Refrigerant migration
Figure 83