1. Introduction
Liquid entrainment/carryover is a common phenomenon for the shell-and-tube flooded or falling film evaporators of a water-cooled centrifugal chiller and has an important impact on the performance and safety of the chiller and compressor. Liquid entrainment reduces the amount of liquid that could otherwise be evaporated for refrigeration and reduces the cooling capacity. At the same time, it vaporizes in the compressor and consumes compressor power; therefore, it is detrimental to the chiller performance. In severe cases, the entrained liquid can erode and damage the impeller. In the boiling tube bundle of the flooded evaporator, liquid droplets are generated by the burst of bubbles near the liquid surface and the shearing effect of the vapor flow inside the tube bundle on the liquid ligament. When the liquid level is higher than the bundle, a liquid layer may exist above the bundle and the droplets may also be produced by the wave action of this layer. In addition, if the pressure difference through the outlet of the evaporator exceeds the suppression effect of gravity and surface tension, droplets may also be generated at the vapor-liquid interface under the evaporator outlet. After the liquid droplets are generated, they enter the headspace above the bundle, the larger liquid droplets fall back to the liquid surface under the gravity effect and the smaller liquid droplets are entrained by the vapor flow into the compressor to form liquid entrainment, as shown in
Figure 1. The figure depicts the scenario where the liquid level is just above the tube bundle. For clarity, the bubbles under the liquid level are not shown. To leave enough space for vapor-liquid separation, the height of the tube bundle in an actual flooded evaporator is generally designed to be 50–60% of the shell diameter.
According to the different flow structure and liquid carryover mechanism, there are three types of liquid entrainment. The first type is liquid carryover by gas flow in straight tubes [
1,
2,
3,
4] and the second type is carryover through T-branches [
5,
6,
7], the third category is the liquid entrainment in a liquid pool [
8,
9,
10]. Liquid entrainment in straight tubes is caused by the shearing effect of the turbulent gas flow on the annular liquid film, while entrainment in the T-branches is caused by the destabilization of the gas-liquid interface under the pressure difference between the main and branch tubes and entrainment in the pool is due to the boiling and bubbling gas flow from the liquid pool. The liquid entrainment problem in straight tubes [
1,
2,
3,
4] and T-branches [
5,
6,
7] has received great attention with a large amount of experimental data having been accumulated and well-developed physical or semi-empirical models having been developed. However, there are relatively few studies on pool entrainment. Kataoka and Ishii [
8] proposed a systematic pool entrainment model and classified pool entrainment into three regions, which are near-surface, momentum controlled and deposition-controlled regions. In each region, a specific correlation model is proposed to calculate the droplet entrainment factor. Due to the differences in the flow patterns in the pool droplet generation mechanisms, the momentum-controlled region is further divided into three sub-regions based on different levels of gas fluxes, but the exact form of entrainment correlation is not given when the gas flux is high. Sun et al. [
9] experimentally studied the pool entrainment with side exit in the near-surface region. Zhang et al. [
10] studied pool entrainment with and without side exit in the momentum-controlled region and proposed a new correlation with side exit in the high gas flux region. Lu and Xie [
11] studied pool entrainment under small air flow rate and proposed an entrainment correlation at low air flow rate, with analysis on the effect of outlet location on the entrainment factor. All the above studies of pool entrainment are for air-water or steam-water systems.
The mechanism of liquid entrainment in the shell side of a flooded evaporator is complicated, including the entrainment mechanism both in the pool [
8] and in the annular flow in horizontal tubes (when the liquid level is higher than the bundle) [
1]. Therefore, the factors that affect the liquid entrainment in the pool and in the annular flow in horizontal tubes all have an impact on the liquid entrainment in the evaporator, including the cooling capacity and operating conditions of the unit, the height of the tube bundle and the refrigerant liquid level, the tube arrangement and the gaps between the tubes, the number of tube pass and the baffle structure in the headspace (if any), etc. For an actual shell-and-tube flooded or falling film evaporator, the mechanism is more complicated due to the three-dimensional characteristics of the vapor and droplets flow above the tube bundle (see
Figure 1). However, there is only limited research on liquid entrainment in the evaporator with refrigerant. Using a laser and camera system and shadow graphic technique, Asher and Eckels investigated the distribution characteristics of droplets generated by the evaporation of refrigerant in the headspace of a rectangular tube bundle with R123 [
12], R134a [
13], respectively. The effects of heat flux, mass flow rate, evaporation temperature and refrigerant level on the liquid distribution generated in the headspace were investigated and the refrigerant level, mass flow rate and evaporation temperature were found to have the greatest influence. For the R134a refrigerant, computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulation using Lagrange discrete phase model was also applied to evaluate and validate the liquid distribution in the headspace using experimentally fitted droplet velocity and diameter parameters as the setting conditions for the discrete phase [
13]. For the actual evaporator of a water-cooled centrifugal chiller, no research work on the liquid entrainment has been reported to the best of the authors’ knowledge.
Regarding the influence of liquid entrainment on the performance of centrifugal compressors, the current research conclusions are not consistent. Surendran and Kim [
14] studied the effect of injecting water droplets in the inlet air for a single-stage centrifugal compressor by CFD, the results show that droplet evaporative cooling can reduce the specific work for a given pressure ratio and improve the aerodynamic efficiency of the compressor. Halbe et al. [
15] studied the effect of liquid entrainment on the performance of a two-stage centrifugal compressor using R134a as the refrigerant. The heat, mass and momentum transfer between entrained droplets and vapor were simulated by the Eulerian-Lagrangian approach. The results show that the vapor flow field inside the compressor was altered by liquid carryover, making the compressor operated at off-design conditions. Meanwhile, the evaporation of droplets requires power consumption, which reduces the adiabatic and polytropic efficiency of the compressor, but the initial size of droplets entering the compressor has little effect on the efficiency. The effect of liquid entrainment on the efficiency of the centrifugal compressor may be related to the physical properties of working fluids, more experimental data are needed.
From the literature above, it can be concluded that there is little research on liquid entrainment in the evaporator of centrifugal chillers. To fill this gap, two methods to measure the liquid entrainment in the evaporator based on the energy balance of the chiller and compressor were proposed and the liquid entrainment factor of the flooded evaporator of a single-stage water-cooled centrifugal chiller was measured and analyzed. The experimental data includes the variation in entrainment factor and the COP of the chiller with the refrigerant charge at different cooling capacities under AHRI full load conditions [
16].
3. Results and Discussion
The liquid entrainment of the evaporator is related to the cooling capacity, chiller operating conditions and the liquid level in the evaporator. Under fixed cooling capacity and operating conditions, with the increase of the refrigerant charge, the liquid level in the evaporator rises and the number of tubes participating in boiling heat transfer gradually increases, which results in the evaporation temperature gradually increasing and the heat transfer temperature difference between cold water and refrigerant gradually decreasing, i.e., the total heat transfer coefficient (HTC),
K, of the evaporator gradually increases. This process continues until the bundle is fully immersed in liquid refrigerant, at this time the evaporative temperature increases to the highest and the total HTC reaches the maximum. Therefore, under fixed cooling capacity and operating conditions,
K of the evaporator can be used to indirectly reflect the change of the evaporator liquid level with the charge, as shown in
Figure 6. The total HTC of the evaporator is calculated by the following Equation (22).
where
Ae is the total heat transfer area of the evaporator based on the envelope diameter of the enhanced tube and ∆
t is the logarithmic mean temperature difference between the refrigerant and cold water, calculated by Equation (23).
It can be seen from
Figure 6 that under fixed operating conditions for each cooling capacity,
K gradually increases with the increase of charge. At 600 and 700 RT, when the refrigerant charge is about 581 kg,
K reaches the maximum value. The amount of refrigerant continues to increase subsequently; however, there is little variation of
K. At 800 RT, when the refrigerant charge is 596 kg,
K reaches the maximum, indicating that as the cooling capacity increases, more refrigerant is needed so that the evaporator tube bundle can be fully immersed. It can be seen from
Figure 6 that
K increases by about 12%, 12% and 20% respectively during the charging process at 600, 700 and 800 RT.
Figure 7 shows the variation of entrainment factor with charge under 700 RT AHRI conditions, where
Efg-1 and
Efg-2 represent
Efg calculated by Equation (14) (Method 1) and Equation (15) (Method 2), respectively. It can be seen that at this cooling capacity, the variation of
Efg with charge conforms to a quadratic curve: with the increase of charge,
Efg gradually increases and the growth rate gradually accelerates. This is because, on the one hand, with the increase of charge, the liquid level in the evaporator rises. Under the shear entrainment of the vapor flow inside the tube bundle, liquid droplets can enter a higher position in the headspace above the bundle with a certain initial velocity, making it easier to be drawn into the compressor to form the liquid carryover. On the other hand, when the liquid level exceeds the bundle, a layer of liquid will be formed on the bundle, which reduces the height of the space above the bundle and the wave action of the liquid layer will entrain more large droplets into the headspace, further increasing the amount of liquid entrainment [
13]. The reason for the close calculation results of the two methods is that the thermal balance at each experimental point is within 1% as mentioned before.
Figure 7 also shows the uncertainty of each experimental point. It can be seen from the figure that the uncertainty of
Efg remains essentially unchanged as charge increases and the average uncertainties of the two methods are 0.22% and 0.20%, respectively. Because
Efg is small at low charge, the relative uncertainty at point 1 is large, reaching about 50%. However, for the evaporator carryover problem of a centrifugal chiller, the meaningful work condition is the one with large cooling capacity and with tube bundle full immersed in liquid refrigerant, which corresponds to the experimental point of 581 kg charge in
Figure 7 (see
Figure 6 above), where the relative uncertainties of methods one and two are 24% and 22%, respectively (as shown in
Table 2). Due to the relatively small experimental uncertainty of Method 2, only the results from Method 2 are shown later in this paper.
Figure 8 shows the variation of the entrainment factor with charge under different cooling capacities and AHRI full load conditions. As a comparison, the results at 700 RT are also shown in this figure. It can be seen that the entrainment factor is small at 600 RT and increases smoothly with the increase of charge. However, the variation trend at 800 RT condition is similar to that at 700 RT, with the entrainment factor increasing slowly at the beginning and gradually accelerating later. Since the cooling capacity relates to the vapor superficial velocity
jv in the vertical direction and the refrigerant charge value relates to the space height
h above the liquid surface, the relationship between the liquid entrainment factor
Efg and the charge amount under different cooling capacities in
Figure 8 actually reflects the dependence of
Efg on
jv/
h. Similar to the pool entrainment in the momentum control region, the dependence of the entrainment factor on
jv/
h varies with the vapor velocity (cooling capacity) [
8]. Due to lower cooling capacity, the two-phase flow pattern in the tube bundle at 600 RT may be different from that at 700 and 800 RT and the initial velocity and diameter of droplets generated are different, resulting in different entrainment factor dependence with
jv/
h, that is, the relationship between
Efg and refrigerant charge is different under different cooling capacity.
Figure 8 also shows that the average uncertainties of
Efg at 600 and 800 RT are 0.21% and 0.18%, respectively.
It can be seen from
Figure 8 that under the full charge of the evaporator (point 5 on the 600 RT and 700 RT curves and point 6 on the 800 RT curve), the
Efg values at 600, 700 and 800 RT are 0.56%, 0.89% and 1.85%, respectively, and
Efg increases rapidly with the increase of cooling capacity. If it is required that the reasonable
Efg is no more than 1% when the unit is running, the refrigerant charge at 800 RT must be reduced to less than 565 kg, which is less than 596 kg of refrigerant required for the evaporator tube bundle to be fully immersed in liquid refrigerant at this working condition. This means that there are “dry tubes” in the evaporator when the unit is running, resulting in about 5% of the heat transfer performance loss at 800 RT, as shown in
Figure 6. By using
Efg = 1% as the limit entrainment factor, the reasonable maximum cooling capacity of the evaporator limited by the liquid entrainment under AHRI conditions is between 700 and 800 RT.
The variation of system COP is caused by the changes in system cooling capacity, system temperature lift (condensation temperature—evaporation temperature, LIFT) and entrainment factor
Efg. As LIFT increases, COP decreases. Compared with the rated cooling capacity of the compressor in the experiment, the tested capacities of 600, 700 and 800 RT are all part loads. If the LIFT remains unchanged, the system COP increases with the increase in cooling capacity.
Figure 9 shows the variation of evaporation temperature
te and the temperature LIFT with charge at each cooling capacity. It can be seen from the figure that as the charge increases, the evaporation temperature at each cooling capacity increases gradually and then remains almost unchanged after the tube bundle is fully immersed in the refrigerant.
Figure 9 also shows that with the increase of the charge, the LIFT experimental value is almost unchanged at 600 RT and the LIFTs of the system are reduced by 0.11 °C and 0.18 °C at 700 and 800 RT, respectively.
The influence of the variation of the cooling capacity, evaporation temperature and condensation temperature on COP can be considered by the calculation based on the compressor efficiency map, which is obtained at a certain suction superheat, so it can be considered that there is no liquid carryover effect. Therefore, the difference between the calculated and test COP can reflect the effect of the liquid entrainment factor.
Figure 10 shows the efficiency factor contours of the test compressor, where Φ is the percent of the rated volumetric flow rate and Ψ is the percent of the rated polytropic work, as described by Equations (24) and (26), respectively.
where
Vn is the rated volumetric flow rate,
Vn = 1.283 m
3·s
−1.
Vs is the refrigerant volumetric flow rate at evaporator state, calculated by Equation (25).
where
ve is the specific volume of refrigerant vapor at evaporator state, determined by the evaporation pressure and the suction enthalpy.
mr is the refrigerant flow rate calculated by Equation (1) assuming no liquid carryover.
where
pc,
pe are condensation and evaporation pressure respectively,
vc is the specific volume of refrigerant vapor at condenser state, determined by the condensation pressure and discharge enthalpy;
f correction factor is introduced to correct the error of calculating the polytropic compression work by using the approximate polytropic process equation [
22].
f is about 1.005 for all test points.
wn is the rated specific polytropic work,
wn =21.4 kJ·kg
−1. Once Φ and Ψ are known, the efficiency factor
η of the compressor is obtained from the compressor map, then the polytopic efficiency
ηc is calculated by Equation (27).
where
ηn is the rated compressor efficiency,
ηn = 0.802, provided by the chiller manufacturer. By adding the polytropic compression power, transmission loss and motor loss, the input power of the chiller can be obtained, thereby obtaining the calculated COP.
Figure 10 also shows each test point. It can be seen from the figure that the test points coincide under each cooling capacity. The variation of Φ and Ψ under each cooling capacity is less than 1.0% and the variation of efficiency factor is less than 0.5%. It can also be seen from the figure that if LIFT (Ψ) remains unchanged, the compressor efficiency factor increases with the increase of cooling capacity under part load.
Figure 11 shows the variation of test and calculated COP with refrigerant charge at each cooling capacity. The calculated COP values of each curve in
Figure 11 were corrected by a constant (0.06, −0.03, −0.05 for 600, 700, 800 RT, respectively) so that the calculated COP at the first point of each curve coincides with the experimental value, to eliminate the influence of the calculation model error and clearly reflect the trend of the influence of the liquid entrainment on COP. As can be seen from
Figure 11, the variation of the calculated COP is small (less than 0.5%) for each curve, mainly because the temperature LIFT is almost constant for each curve (0–0.18 °C, see
Figure 9) and the variations of the cooling capacity are also small for each curve (1.1–1.4%).
For the test chiller, the most important factor that causes the variation of COP is the
Efg and its variation. If the variation of cooling capacity and LIFT is not considered, the system COP decreases with the increase of
Efg, because the liquid droplets entrained by the vapor do not contribute to the corresponding cooling capacity, while the evaporation and compression of the liquid droplets in the compressor consumes compression power. Moreover, due to the density difference under vapor and liquid phases and the interactions between the two phases, entrained droplets will alter the flow field within the compressor, making the compressor operation deviate from the design conditions and thus decreasing compressor performance, so 1% liquid entrainment may result in more than 1% reduction on system COP [
15]. From
Figure 11, it can be seen that at 600 RT, the relative difference between the tested and calculated COPs is very small (<0.4%). This is because at 600 RT the entrainment factor
Efg increased by only about 0.3% at the end of charging (see
Figure 8). At 700 RT,
Efg increased by 0.87% at the end of charging, resulting in a 1.2% decrease in test COP relative to the calculated COP. As can be seen from
Figure 11, a large deviation starts from the 5th point because
Efg at this point is relatively large (
Efg = 0.89%) and
Efg increases rapidly with the increase of charge at 700 RT (see
Figure 8), leading to the COP test value drops significantly at this point. At 800 RT,
Efg increased by 1.9% at the end of charging, which made the test COP decreased by 2.5% relative to the calculated COP. It can be seen from
Figure 11 that the test COP has a significant decrease from the calculated value at point 4 (
Efg = 1.02%). In view of the important influence of
Efg on the unit COP, it is recommended that the maximum
Efg for efficient operation of the unit be controlled at less than 1%.