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The Absorption Refrigerator or (How to apply heat to cool things down)
Copyright - 1998/2005 - Les Doll - All rights reserved At the rear of the modern absorption (RV) refrigerator, there is a maze of steel tubing called the cooling unit. It is a self-contained, sealed system containing ammonia, hydrogen, water and a corrosion resisting agent. (usually sodium chromate) In the lower portion of the
cooling unit there is a bulb shaped container, called the
absorber, holding a solution of ammonia and water, which is
The ammonia gas enters the finned condenser at the top of the cooling unit, where heat is dissipated to the atmosphere. As a result of this cooling effect, the ammonia vapor condenses to a liquid form and gravity takes over. The liquid ammonia flows down to the evaporator tube located inside the freezer compartment, where it mixes with pure hydrogen gas, again allowing the ammonia to "boil". It takes heat to produce this change of state (liquid ammonia to vaporous ammonia) and this heat is extracted from the freezer compartment and the food contained within. The weight of the ammonia/hydrogen mixture carries it down to the absorber bulb at the bottom of the cooling unit, where the water in the system absorbs the ammonia. The released hydrogen (a very light gas) rises through the absorption tube passing over the water that is running down from the siphon pump (discussed above) and the remaining ammonia is absorbed. Therefor pure hydrogen is available again at the evaporator and the water/ammonia mix in the absorber bulb can continue the cycle. This is the basic operation of the absorption cooling unit. Other components are involved to control the temperature settings. Other Resources Trouble shooting the cooling unit. Fridge Help. |