Energy and exergy analysis for VCRS of a water dispenser

Because of the scorching weather and people's innate demand for cool water, water dispensers are very common throughout the middle east. The apparatus used for the experimental test included a water cooler, a small refrigerator, a wire-on-tube condenser, a low back pressure reciprocating compre...

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Main Authors: Mohammed Hashim Mohammed Alshammaa, Louay A. Mahdi, Mojtaba Babaelahi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-06-01
Series:Results in Engineering
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S259012302500684X
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author Mohammed Hashim Mohammed Alshammaa
Louay A. Mahdi
Mojtaba Babaelahi
author_facet Mohammed Hashim Mohammed Alshammaa
Louay A. Mahdi
Mojtaba Babaelahi
author_sort Mohammed Hashim Mohammed Alshammaa
collection DOAJ
description Because of the scorching weather and people's innate demand for cool water, water dispensers are very common throughout the middle east. The apparatus used for the experimental test included a water cooler, a small refrigerator, a wire-on-tube condenser, a low back pressure reciprocating compressor, and a capillary tube that served as a throttling device. By adding four pressure trancedusers and gauges, a turbine meter to record the refrigerant flow rate, many temperature sensors to monitor the air and refrigerant temperatures, and a device to measure power consumption, the machine is transformed into a laboratory machine. Data acquisition is being connected to all of these measuring devices, and the computer has been instantly registered with the data. The analysis of energy and exergy was finished by experimentation. The main conclusions are as follows: The water dispenser operates in line with the real vapor compression refrigeration system due to the pressure drop and heat losses that take place throughout the test.The water temperature drops in two stages: first, it drops quickly from 30 to 18 °C in 20 min, and then it drops from 18 to 10 °C in 60 min. The power usage increases in tandem with the rise in the surrounding temperature. Less than a third of the power was used for compression, while the remaining two thirds were used for heat and friction losses. The refrigerator's and water cooler's respective cooling capacities and heat losses. The exergy efficiency of each system component is shown; the compressor shows a lower efficiency value of 0.75 and the water cooler a higher efficiency value of 0.96 for the different ambient temperatures. The wire-on-tube condenser took 0.93, the refrigerator took 0.91, and the throttling took 0.95. The exergy destruction of the system components showed that the compressor lost 23 W of high energy, followed by the refrigerator (8W), wire-on-tube condenser (6 W), and throttling (5 W), with the water cooler experiencing lesser losses of 3 W at room temperature (30 °C). The C.O.P. act less than unity, the C.O.P. Carnot is around four units.
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spelling doaj-art-20290cd56bcd47bdaddd633b7fa4b3b52025-08-20T02:51:38ZengElsevierResults in Engineering2590-12302025-06-012610460710.1016/j.rineng.2025.104607Energy and exergy analysis for VCRS of a water dispenserMohammed Hashim Mohammed Alshammaa0Louay A. Mahdi1Mojtaba Babaelahi2Institute of Technology _Baghdad, Middle Technical University, Baghdad, IraqEnergy and Renewable Energies Technology Centre, University of Technology- Iraq, Baghdad, 35050, Iraq; Corresponding author.Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Qom, Qom, IranBecause of the scorching weather and people's innate demand for cool water, water dispensers are very common throughout the middle east. The apparatus used for the experimental test included a water cooler, a small refrigerator, a wire-on-tube condenser, a low back pressure reciprocating compressor, and a capillary tube that served as a throttling device. By adding four pressure trancedusers and gauges, a turbine meter to record the refrigerant flow rate, many temperature sensors to monitor the air and refrigerant temperatures, and a device to measure power consumption, the machine is transformed into a laboratory machine. Data acquisition is being connected to all of these measuring devices, and the computer has been instantly registered with the data. The analysis of energy and exergy was finished by experimentation. The main conclusions are as follows: The water dispenser operates in line with the real vapor compression refrigeration system due to the pressure drop and heat losses that take place throughout the test.The water temperature drops in two stages: first, it drops quickly from 30 to 18 °C in 20 min, and then it drops from 18 to 10 °C in 60 min. The power usage increases in tandem with the rise in the surrounding temperature. Less than a third of the power was used for compression, while the remaining two thirds were used for heat and friction losses. The refrigerator's and water cooler's respective cooling capacities and heat losses. The exergy efficiency of each system component is shown; the compressor shows a lower efficiency value of 0.75 and the water cooler a higher efficiency value of 0.96 for the different ambient temperatures. The wire-on-tube condenser took 0.93, the refrigerator took 0.91, and the throttling took 0.95. The exergy destruction of the system components showed that the compressor lost 23 W of high energy, followed by the refrigerator (8W), wire-on-tube condenser (6 W), and throttling (5 W), with the water cooler experiencing lesser losses of 3 W at room temperature (30 °C). The C.O.P. act less than unity, the C.O.P. Carnot is around four units.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S259012302500684XEnergyExergyWater dispenserRefrigerator
spellingShingle Mohammed Hashim Mohammed Alshammaa
Louay A. Mahdi
Mojtaba Babaelahi
Energy and exergy analysis for VCRS of a water dispenser
Results in Engineering
Energy
Exergy
Water dispenser
Refrigerator
title Energy and exergy analysis for VCRS of a water dispenser
title_full Energy and exergy analysis for VCRS of a water dispenser
title_fullStr Energy and exergy analysis for VCRS of a water dispenser
title_full_unstemmed Energy and exergy analysis for VCRS of a water dispenser
title_short Energy and exergy analysis for VCRS of a water dispenser
title_sort energy and exergy analysis for vcrs of a water dispenser
topic Energy
Exergy
Water dispenser
Refrigerator
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S259012302500684X
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