Difference Between Air Cooled and Water Cooled Chiller System
May 29, 2019
Many regions in the world are grappling with water scarcity. Numerous efforts to desalinate and trade in water are evidence of the magnitude of the problem. The World Bank puts the number of people living with absolute water scarcity at 2bn, a number that could hit the 4.6bn mark within the next 65 years.
The water energy nexus has been a regular subject in recent years. Power plants that feed most nations consume a lot of water, either directly or indirectly.
When it comes to the feasibility study of a cooling plant, the debate of consuming water or not is very important. Depending on the results of this study, water cooled or air cooled chillers will be selected.
What is a chiller?
This device removes heat from a load and transfers it to the environment using a refrigeration system. This heat transfer device is the preferable cooling machine in power plants and other large-scale facilities.
It is simply a system consisting of an ethylene + water or water reservoir and circulation components. The cooling fluid is circulated from the reservoir to the equipment under cooling.
There are also air cooled chillers, which disperse heat-using fans. These are more recent and common in power plants. In this post, we review the difference between the two technologies, leaving the choice of which one to pick to you. Amrta air conditioner would be happy to help you in the decision making process.
Water cooled chiller
Water cooled chiller systems have a cooling tower, thus they feature higher efficiency than air cooled chillers.
Water cooled chillers are more efficient because they condense depending on the ambient temperature bulb temperature, which is lower than the ambient dry bulb temperature. The lower a chiller condenses, the more efficient it is.
This system has several essential components including:
Cooling towers
Condenser water pumps
Make-up water pumps
Chillers
TES reservoirs
What are the benefits of a water cooled chiller?
Some users may prefer these chillers because of the smaller size they occupy as compared to air-cooled chillers. These chillers also feature higher efficiency and last longer than the mentioned alternative. Those who would like the equipment to be placed indoors may find the water-cooled machine desirable.
In the evaporator
The role of the evaporator is to produce chilled water. The device releases the water at about 6°C (42.8°F) and pushes it throughout the facility with the help of a pump.
A network of pipes passes the chilled water through every necessary section of the building. After exchanging coldness with room air, which blows across the Air Handling Unit (AHU’s) and fan coil unit (FCU’s), the water is now warmer at about 12°C (53.6°F). It returns to the evaporator where the refrigerant absorbs the unwanted heat and directs it to the condenser. The chilled water is cool once again and it can now continue to cool the facility. Note how this is called “chilled water” throughout no matter the temperature.
In the condenser
A refrigerant brings unwanted heat from the evaporator and passes through the condenser. There is another loop connected to the condenser- the condenser water loop, which is between the cooling tower and the condenser.
After entering the condenser at about 27°C (80.6°F), the water leaves at 32°C (89.6°F) and heads to the cooling tower. Note that at no time do the refrigerant and the condenser contact directly. Heat exchange is only through a pipe wall. The condenser water, with the unwanted heat, goes to the cooling tower for further heat rejection.
In the cooling towers
This is where the unwanted heat in a facility ends up. A large fan feeds the unit with air. The air meets with the oncoming condenser water. From the direct contact, the condenser water loses heat to the air. The condenser water goes back to the condenser the cycle continues. These open-topped devices come in many designs depending on many factors. Examples are cross flow, counter flow, natural draft and mechanical draft. Stay with us for a coverage of these designs in upcoming posts.
This is a good way of settling the cooling tower vs. chiller confusion. However, if you still need more details about the water-cooled chiller components and operation, reach out to our team and you will get help.
Now, compare it to the air-cooled chiller discussed below.
Air cooled chiller
Where aesthetics and environmental conditions or water access restrictions exist, air-cooled chiller may be applied. Both air-cooled and water-cooled chillers depend on an air stream as a means of heat transfer.
The difference is that the water-cooled chillers or rather the cooling towers use a humid air stream (ambient air stream + water spray) while the air-cooled chillers use a current of ambient air.
Normally water-cooled chillers are cheaper and more efficient, with the disadvantage of high water consumption.
Amrta air conditioning has found a way of combining modern manufacturing methods and advanced technology to achieve highly effective and efficient air-cooled chillers.
Owing to that, the company’s chiller plants are very competitive to water chilled chillers in different aspects. For example, these plants are very impressive in terms of footprint, efficiency and noise.
Unfortunately, some people still believe that air cooled chillers cannot offer quite good efficiencies. What such people only need to check is the performance of these chillers two decades ago is the progressive increase in NPLV rating of air-cooled chillers over the years.
Already, many chiller plants in the Middle East and elsewhere have adopted ARANER’s air-cooled designs and have expressed satisfaction. When used in part load applications, these chillers are very reliable.
In summary, here are the benefits of using air-cooled chillers:
No cooling towers
Better environmental stability-no water wastage
Low maintenance costs
Easier to operate and control-tower freezing and tower bypass absent
Chemical costs avoided
Water costs avoided, especially in cities
No water problems to deal with in case of disaster
How do I choose between the two?
The cooling capacity is the main guideline for the choice of chiller. Equally crucial is the balance between operating costs and capital costs.
Some clients will base their buying decision on initial cost. However, a value-based option considers both operational cost and initial cost. To determine the initial cost of each option, add the costs for both contractor and equipment. For the water-cooled chiller, remember to add cooling tower.
When it comes to life cycle cost, you have to consider both purchase cost and operating cost.
When you evaluate each of the two chillers this way, you are able to determine its total cost. What you must note is that water-cooled chillers normally appear more valuable if you ignore first cost and water cost. However, it is only after you look at the broader costs that the true picture appears clearly.
Conclusion
Energy cost remains a major consideration in any powered equipment. Energy saving measures are being implemented everywhere.
While the chiller has direct impact on energy usage, there are other factors to consider. While the water-cooled chiller may be more energy efficient, it receives stiff competition from air-cooled chiller in terms of installation cost, maintenance cost, number of equipment and several other aspects.
Most importantly, air cooled chiller avoid water consumption so they are ideal alternative in areas with water scarcity or areas with cheap energy but costly water fees.
Have you made your choice already?
Give us a call today for the most specialized and customized attention.
If you enjoyed this post, you may be want to know different heat rejection condensing technologies.