Air
conditioning includes both the cooling and heating of air.
It also cleans the air and controls the moisture level.
An
air conditioner is able to cool a building because it removes
heat from the indoor air and transfers it outdoors. A chemical
refrigerant in the system absorbs the unwanted heat and pumps
it through a system of piping to the outside coil. The fan,
located in the outside unit, blows outside air over the hot
coil, transferring heat from the refrigerant to the outdoor
air.
Basic
Operations
Most
air conditioning systems have four mechanical components:
a
compressor
an expansion valve or metering device
an evaporator coil and blower
a chemical refrigerant
Most central air conditioning units operate by means of a
split system. That is, they consist of a "hot" side,
or the condensing unit—including the condensing coil,
the compressor and the fan—which is situated outside
your home, and a "cold" side that is located inside
your home. The cold side consists of an expansion valve and
a cold coil, and it is usually part of your furnace or some
type of air handler. The furnace blows air through an evaporator
coil, which cools the air. Then this cool air is routed throughout
your home by means of a series of air ducts. A window unit
operates on the same principal, the only difference being
that both the hot side and the cold side are located within
the same housing unit.
The compressor (which is controlled by the thermostat) is
the "heart" of the system. The compressor acts as
the pump, causing the refrigerant to flow through the system.
Its job is to draw in a low-pressure, low-temperature, refrigerant
in a gaseous state and by compressing this gas, raise the
pressure and temperature of the refrigerant. This high-pressure,
high-temperature gas then flows to the condenser coil.
The
condenser coil is a series of piping with a fan that draws
outside air across the coil. As the refrigerant passes through
the condenser coil and the cooler outside air passes across
the coil, the air absorbs heat from the refrigerant which
causes the refrigerant to condense from a gas to a liquid
state. The high-pressure, high-temperature liquid then reaches
the expansion valve.
The
expansion valve is the "brain" of the system. By
sensing the temperature of the evaporator, or cooling coil,
it allows liquid to pass through a very small orifice, which
causes the refrigerant to expand to a low-pressure, low-temperature
gas. This "cold" refrigerant flows to the evaporator.
The
evaporator coil is a series of piping connected to a furnace
or air handler that blows indoor air across it, causing the
coil to absorb heat from the air. The cooled air is then delivered
to the house through ducting. The refrigerant then flows back
to the compressor where the cycle starts over again.