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Wikipedia

Air conditioning

Air conditioning, often abbreviated as A/C (US) or air con (UK),[1] is the process of removing heat from an enclosed space to achieve a more comfortable interior environment (sometimes referred to as 'comfort cooling') and in some cases also strictly controlling the humidity of internal air. Air conditioning can be achieved using a mechanical 'air conditioner' or by other methods, including passive cooling and ventilative cooling.[2][3] Air conditioning is a member of a family of systems and techniques that provide heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC).[4] Heat pumps are similar in many ways to air conditioners, but use a reversing valve to allow them both to heat and to cool an enclosed space.[5]

There are various types of air conditioners. Popular examples include: Window-mounted air conditioner for single-room use (Suriname, 1955); Ceiling-mounted cassette air conditioner (China, 2023); Wall-mounted air conditioner (Japan, 2020); and ceiling-mounted console (Also called ceiling suspended) air conditioner (China, 2023).

Air conditioners, which typically use vapor-compression refrigeration, range in size from small units used in vehicles or single rooms to massive units that can cool large buildings.[6] Air source heat pumps, which can be used for heating as well as cooling, are becoming increasingly common in cooler climates.

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), as of 2018, 1.6 billion air conditioning units were installed, which accounted for an estimated 20% of electricity usage in buildings globally, with the number expected to grow to 5.6 billion by 2050.[7] The United Nations called for the technology to be made more sustainable to mitigate climate change and for the use of alternatives, like passive cooling, evaporative cooling, selective shading, windcatchers, and better thermal insulation. CFC and HCFC refrigerants such as R-12 and R-22, respectively, used within air conditioners have caused damage to the ozone layer,[8] and HFC refrigerants such as R-410a and R-404a, which were designed to replace CFCs and HCFCs, are instead exacerbating climate change.[9] Both issues happen due to the venting of refrigerant to the atmosphere, such as during repairs. HFO refrigerants, used in some if not most new equipment, solve both issues with an ozone damage potential (ODP) of zero and a much lower global warming potential (GWP) in the single or double digits vs. the three or four digits of HFCs.[10]

History edit

Air conditioning dates back to prehistory.[11] Double-walled living quarters, with a gap between the two walls to encourage air flow, were found in the ancient city of Hamoukar, in modern Syria.[12] Ancient Egyptian buildings also used a wide variety of passive air-conditioning techniques.[13] These became widespread from the Iberian Peninsula through North Africa, the Middle East, and Northern India.[14]

Passive techniques remained widespread until the 20th century when they fell out of fashion and were replaced by powered air conditioning. Using information from engineering studies of traditional buildings, passive techniques are being revived and modified for 21st-century architectural designs.[15][14]

 
An array of air conditioner condenser units outside a commercial office building

Air conditioners allow the building's indoor environment to remain relatively constant, largely independent of changes in external weather conditions and internal heat loads. They also enable deep plan buildings to be created and have allowed people to live comfortably in hotter parts of the world, but have now come under criticism for contributing significantly to climate-change due to their high electricity consumption and the warming of their immediate surroundings in large cities.[16][17]

Development edit

Preceding discoveries edit

In 1558, Giambattista della Porta described a method of chilling ice to temperatures far below its freezing point by mixing it with potassium nitrate (then called "nitre") in his popular science book Natural Magic.[18][19][20] In 1620, Cornelis Drebbel demonstrated "Turning Summer into Winter" for James I of England, chilling part of the Great Hall of Westminster Abbey with an apparatus of troughs and vats.[21] Drebbel's contemporary Francis Bacon, like della Porta a believer in science communication, may not have been present at the demonstration, but in a book published later the same year, he described it as "experiment of artificial freezing" and said that "Nitre (or rather its spirit) is very cold, and hence nitre or salt when added to snow or ice intensifies the cold of the latter, the nitre by adding to its cold, but the salt by supplying activity to the cold of the snow."[18]

In 1758, Benjamin Franklin and John Hadley, a chemistry professor at the University of Cambridge, conducted experiments applying the principle of evaporation as a means to cool an object rapidly. Franklin and Hadley confirmed that the evaporation of highly volatile liquids (such as alcohol and ether) could be used to drive down the temperature of an object past the freezing point of water. They experimented with the bulb of a mercury-in-glass thermometer as their object. They used a bellows to speed up the evaporation. They lowered the temperature of the thermometer bulb down to −14 °C (7 °F) while the ambient temperature was 18 °C (64 °F). Franklin noted that soon after they passed the freezing point of water 0 °C (32 °F), a thin film of ice formed on the surface of the thermometer's bulb and that the ice mass was about 6 mm (14 in) thick when they stopped the experiment upon reaching −14 °C (7 °F). Franklin concluded: "From this experiment, one may see the possibility of freezing a man to death on a warm summer's day."[22]

The 19th century included many developments in compression technology. In 1820, English scientist and inventor Michael Faraday discovered that compressing and liquefying ammonia could chill air when the liquefied ammonia was allowed to evaporate.[23] In 1842, Florida physician John Gorrie used compressor technology to create ice, which he used to cool air for his patients in his hospital in Apalachicola, Florida. He hoped to eventually use his ice-making machine to regulate the temperature of buildings.[23][24] He envisioned centralized air conditioning that could cool entire cities. Gorrie was granted a patent in 1851, but following the death of his main backer, he was not able to realize his invention.[25] In 1851, James Harrison created the first mechanical ice-making machine in Geelong, Australia, and was granted a patent for an ether vapor-compression refrigeration system in 1855 that produced three tons of ice per day.[26] In 1860, Harrison established a second ice company. He later entered the debate over competing against the American advantage of ice-refrigerated beef sales to the United Kingdom.[26]

First devices edit

 
Willis Carrier, who is credited with building the first modern electrical air conditioning unit

Electricity made the development of effective units possible. In 1901, American inventor Willis H. Carrier built what is considered the first modern electrical air conditioning unit.[27][28][29][30] In 1902, he installed his first air-conditioning system, in the Sackett-Wilhelms Lithographing & Publishing Company in Brooklyn, New York.[31] His invention controlled both the temperature and humidity, which helped maintain consistent paper dimensions and ink alignment at the printing plant. Later, together with six other employees, Carrier formed The Carrier Air Conditioning Company of America, a business that in 2020 employed 53,000 people and was valued at $18.6 billion.[32][33]

In 1906, Stuart W. Cramer of Charlotte, North Carolina, was exploring ways to add moisture to the air in his textile mill. Cramer coined the term "air conditioning", by it in a patent claim he filed that year as analogous to "water conditioning", then a well-known process for making textiles easier to process. He combined moisture with ventilation to "condition" and change the air in the factories; thus, controlling the humidity that is necessary in textile plants. Willis Carrier adopted the term and incorporated it into the name of his company.[34]

Domestic air conditioning soon took off. In 1914, the first domestic air conditioning was installed in Minneapolis in the home of Charles Gilbert Gates. It is, however, possible that the considerable device (c. 2.1 m × 1.8 m × 6.1 m; 7 ft × 6 ft × 20 ft) was never used, as the house remained uninhabited[23](Gates had already died in October 1913).

In 1931, H.H. Schultz and J.Q. Sherman developed what would become the most common type of individual room air conditioner: one designed to sit on a window ledge. The units went on sale in 1932 at US$10,000 to $50,000 (the equivalent of $200,000 to $1,100,000 in 2023.)[23] A year later, the first air conditioning systems for cars were offered for sale.[35] Chrysler Motors introduced the first practical semi-portable air conditioning unit in 1935,[36] and Packard became the first automobile manufacturer to offer an air conditioning unit in its cars in 1939.[37]

Further development edit

Innovations in the latter half of the 20th century allowed more ubiquitous air conditioner use. In 1945, Robert Sherman of Lynn, Massachusetts, invented a portable, in-window air conditioner that cooled, heated, humidified, dehumidified, and filtered the air.[38] The first inverter air conditioners were released in 1980-1981.[39][40]

As international development has increased wealth across countries, global use of air conditioners has increased. By 2018, an estimated 1.6 billion air conditioning units were installed worldwide,[41] with the International Energy Agency expecting this number to grow to 5.6 billion units by 2050.[7] Between 1995 and 2004, the proportion of urban households in China with air conditioners increased from 8% to 70%.[42] As of 2015, nearly 100 million homes, or about 87% of US households, had air conditioning systems.[43] In 2019, it was estimated that 90% of new single-family homes constructed in the US included air conditioning (ranging from 99% in the South to 62% in the West).[44][45]

Operation edit

Operating principles edit

 
A simple stylized diagram of the refrigeration cycle: 1) condensing coil, 2) expansion valve, 3) evaporator coil, 4) compressor

Cooling in traditional air conditioner systems is accomplished using the vapor-compression cycle, which uses a refrigerant's forced circulation and phase change between gas and liquid to transfer heat.[46][47] The vapor-compression cycle can occur within a unitary, or packaged piece of equipment; or within a chiller that is connected to terminal cooling equipment (such as a fan coil unit in an air handler) on its evaporator side and heat rejection equipment such as a cooling tower on its condenser side. An air source heat pump shares many components with an air conditioning system, but includes a reversing valve, which allows the unit to be used to heat as well as cool a space.[48]

Air conditioning equipment will reduce the absolute humidity of the air processed by the system if the surface of the evaporator coil is significantly cooler than the dew point of the surrounding air. An air conditioner designed for an occupied space will typically achieve a 30% to 60% relative humidity in the occupied space.[49]

Most modern air-conditioning systems feature a dehumidification cycle during which the compressor runs. At the same time, the fan is slowed to reduce the evaporator temperature and condense more water. A dehumidifier uses the same refrigeration cycle but incorporates both the evaporator and the condenser into the same air path; the air first passes over the evaporator coil, where it is cooled[50] and dehumidified before passes over the condenser coil, where it is warmed again before being released back into the room again.[citation needed]

Free cooling can sometimes be selected when the external air is cooler than the internal air. Therefore, the compressor does not need to be used, resulting in high cooling efficiencies for these times. This may also be combined with seasonal thermal energy storage.[51]

Heating edit

Some air conditioning systems can reverse the refrigeration cycle and act as an air source heat pump, thus heating instead of cooling the indoor environment. They are also commonly referred to as "reverse cycle air conditioners". The heat pump is significantly more energy-efficient than electric resistance heating, because it moves energy from air or groundwater to the heated space and the heat from purchased electrical energy. When the heat pump is in heating mode, the indoor evaporator coil switches roles and becomes the condenser coil, producing heat. The outdoor condenser unit also switches roles to serve as the evaporator and discharges cold air (colder than the ambient outdoor air).

Most air source heat pumps become less efficient in outdoor temperatures lower than 4 °C or 40 °F.[52] This is partly because ice forms on the outdoor unit's heat exchanger coil, which blocks air flow over the coil. To compensate for this, the heat pump system must temporarily switch back into the regular air conditioning mode to switch the outdoor evaporator coil back to the condenser coil, to heat up and defrost. Therefore, some heat pump systems will have electric resistance heating in the indoor air path that is activated only in this mode to compensate for the temporary indoor air cooling, which would otherwise be uncomfortable in the winter.

Newer models have improved cold-weather performance, with efficient heating capacity down to −14 °F (−26 °C).[53][52][54] However, there is always a chance that the humidity that condenses on the heat exchanger of the outdoor unit could freeze, even in models that have improved cold-weather performance, requiring a defrosting cycle to be performed.

The icing problem becomes much more severe with lower outdoor temperatures, so heat pumps are sometimes installed in tandem with a more conventional form of heating, such as an electrical heater, a natural gas, heating oil, or wood-burning fireplace or central heating, which is used instead of or in addition to the heat pump during harsher winter temperatures. In this case, the heat pump is used efficiently during milder temperatures, and the system is switched to the conventional heat source when the outdoor temperature is lower.

Performance edit

The coefficient of performance (COP) of an air conditioning system is a ratio of useful heating or cooling provided to the work required.[55][56] Higher COPs equate to lower operating costs. The COP usually exceeds 1; however, the exact value is highly dependent on operating conditions, especially absolute temperature and relative temperature between sink and system, and is often graphed or averaged against expected conditions.[57] Air conditioner equipment power in the U.S. is often described in terms of "tons of refrigeration", with each approximately equal to the cooling power of one short ton (2,000 pounds (910 kg) of ice melting in a 24-hour period. The value is equal to 12,000 BTUIT per hour, or 3,517 watts.[58] Residential central air systems are usually from 1 to 5 tons (3.5 to 18 kW) in capacity.[citation needed]

The efficiency of air conditioners is often rated by the seasonal energy efficiency ratio (SEER), which is defined by the Air Conditioning, Heating and Refrigeration Institute in its 2008 standard AHRI 210/240, Performance Rating of Unitary Air-Conditioning and Air-Source Heat Pump Equipment.[59] A similar standard is the European seasonal energy efficiency ratio (ESEER).[citation needed]

Control system edit

Wireless remote control edit

 
A wireless remote controller
 
The infrared transmitting LED on the remote
 
The infrared receiver on the A/C

This type of controller uses an infrared LED to relay commands from a remote control to the air conditioner. The output of the infrared LED (like that of any infrared remote) is invisible to the human eye because its wavelength is beyond the range of visible light. This controller is commonly used on mini-split air conditioners because it is simple and portable.

Wired controller edit

 
 
 
 
Several wired controllers (Indonesia, 2024)

A wired controller, also called a "wired thermostat," is a device that controls an air conditioner by switching heating or cooling on or off. It uses different sensors types to measure temperatures and actuate control operations. Mechanical thermostats commonly use bimetallic strips, converting a temperature change into mechanical displacement, to actuate control of the air conditioner. Electronic thermostats, instead, use a thermistor or other semiconductor sensor, processing temperature change as electronic signals to control the air conditioner.

These controllers are usually used in hotel rooms because they are permanently installed into a wall and hard-wired directly into the air conditioner unit, eliminating the need for batteries.

Types edit

Types Typical Capacity* Air supply Mounting Typical application
Mini-split small - large Direct Wall Residential
Window very small - small Direct Window Residential
Portable very small - small Direct / Ducted Floor Residential, remote areas
Ducted (individual) small - very large Ducted Ceiling Residential, commercial
Ducted (central) medium - very large Ducted Ceiling Residential, commercial
Ceiling suspended medium - large Direct Ceiling Commercial
Cassette medium - large Direct / Ducted Ceiling Commercial
Floor standing medium - large Direct / Ducted Floor Commercial
Packaged very large Direct / Ducted Floor Commercial
Packaged RTU (Rooftop Unit) very large Ducted Rooftop Commercial

* where the typical capacity is in kilowatt as follows:

  • very small: <1.5 kw
  • small: 1.5 - 3.5 kw
  • medium: 4.2 - 7.1 kw
  • large: 7.2 - 14 kw
  • very large: 14> kw

Mini-split and multi-split systems edit

 
Evaporator, indoor unit, or terminal, side of a ductless split-type air conditioner

Ductless systems (often mini-split, though there are now ducted mini-split) typically supply conditioned and heated air to a single or a few rooms of a building, without ducts and in a decentralized manner.[60] Multi-zone or multi-split systems are a common application of ductless systems and allow up to eight rooms (zones or locations) to be conditioned independently from each other, each with its indoor unit and simultaneously from a single outdoor unit.

The first mini-split system was sold in 1961 by Toshiba in Japan, and the first wall-mounted mini-split air conditioner was sold in 1968 in Japan by Mitsubishi Electric, where small home sizes motivated their development. The Mitsubishi model was the first air conditioner with a cross-flow fan.[61][62][63] In 1969, the first mini-split air conditioner was sold in the US.[64] Multi-zone ductless systems were invented by Daikin in 1973, and variable refrigerant flow systems (which can be thought of as larger multi-split systems) were also invented by Daikin in 1982. Both were first sold in Japan.[65] Variable refrigerant flow systems when compared with central plant cooling from an air handler, eliminate the need for large cool air ducts, air handlers, and chillers; instead cool refrigerant is transported through much smaller pipes to the indoor units in the spaces to be conditioned, thus allowing for less space above dropped ceilings and a lower structural impact, while also allowing for more individual and independent temperature control of spaces. The outdoor and indoor units can be spread across the building.[66] Variable refrigerant flow indoor units can also be turned off individually in unused spaces.[citation needed] The lower start-up power of VRF's DC inverter compressors and their inherent DC power requirements also allow VRF solar-powered heat pumps to be run using DC-providing solar panels.

Ducted central systems edit

Split-system central air conditioners consist of two heat exchangers, an outside unit (the condenser) from which heat is rejected to the environment and an internal heat exchanger (the fan coil unit (FCU), air handling unit, or evaporator) with the piped refrigerant being circulated between the two. The FCU is then connected to the spaces to be cooled by ventilation ducts.[67]

Central plant cooling edit

 
An industrial air conditioning unit on top of the shopping mall Passage in Linz, Austria

Large central cooling plants may use intermediate coolant such as chilled water pumped into air handlers or fan coil units near or in the spaces to be cooled which then duct or deliver cold air into the spaces to be conditioned, rather than ducting cold air directly to these spaces from the plant, which is not done due to the low density and heat capacity of air, which would require impractically large ducts. The chilled water is cooled by chillers in the plant, which uses a refrigeration cycle to cool water, often transferring its heat to the atmosphere even in liquid-cooled chillers through the use of cooling towers. Chillers may be air- or liquid-cooled.[citation needed]

Portable units edit

A portable system has an indoor unit on wheels connected to an outdoor unit via flexible pipes, similar to a permanently fixed installed unit (such as a ductless split air conditioner).

Hose systems, which can be monoblock or air-to-air, are vented to the outside via air ducts. The monoblock type collects the water in a bucket or tray and stops when full. The air-to-air type re-evaporates the water, discharges it through the ducted hose, and can run continuously. Such portable units draw indoor air and expel it outdoors through a single duct, negatively impacting their overall cooling efficiency.

Many portable air conditioners come with heat as well as a dehumidification function.[68]

Window unit and packaged terminal edit

 
Through-the-wall PTAC units, University Motor Inn, Philadelphia

The packaged terminal air conditioner (PTAC), through-the-wall, and window air conditioners are similar. These units are installed on a window frame or on a wall opening. The unit usually has an internal partition separating its indoor and outdoor sides, which contain the unit's condenser and evaporator, respectively. PTAC systems may be adapted to provide heating in cold weather, either directly by using an electric strip, gas, or other heaters, or by reversing the refrigerant flow to heat the interior and draw heat from the exterior air, converting the air conditioner into a heat pump. They may be installed in a wall opening with the help of a special sleeve on the wall and a custom grill that is flush with the wall and window air conditioners can also be installed in a window, but without a custom grill.[69]

Packaged air conditioner edit

Packaged air conditioners (also known as self-contained units)[70][71] are central systems that integrate into a single housing all the components of a split central system, and deliver air, possibly through ducts, to the spaces to be cooled. Depending on their construction they may be outdoors or indoors, on roofs (rooftop units),[72][73] draw the air to be conditioned from inside or outside a building and be water or air-cooled. Often, outdoor units are air-cooled while indoor units are liquid-cooled using a cooling tower.[67][74][75][76][77][78]

Types of compressors edit

Compressor types Common aplications Typical capacity Efficiency Durability Repairability
Reciprocating Refrigerator, Walk-in freezer, portable air conditioners small - large very low (small capacity)

medium (large capacity)

very low medium
Rotary vane Residential mini splits small low low easy
Scroll Commercial and central systems, VRF medium medium medium easy
Rotary screw Commercial chiller medium - large medium medium hard
Centrifugal Commercial chiller very large medium high hard
Maglev Centrifugal Commercial chiller very large high very high very hard

Reciprocating edit

This compressor consists of a crankcase, crankshaft, piston rod, piston, piston ring, cylinder head and valves. [citation needed]

Scroll edit

This compressor uses two interleaving scrolls to compress the refrigerant.[79] it consists of one fixed and one orbiting scrolls. This type of compressor is more efficient because it has 70 percent less moving parts than a reciprocating compressor. [citation needed]

Screw edit

This compressor use two very closely meshing spiral rotors to compress the gas. The gas enters at the suction side and moves through the threads as the screws rotate. The meshing rotors force the gas through the compressor, and the gas exits at the end of the screws. The working area is the inter-lobe volume between the male and female rotors. It is larger at the intake end, and decreases along the length of the rotors until the exhaust port. This change in volume is the compression. [citation needed]

Capacity modulation technologies edit

There are several ways to modulate the cooling capacity in refrigeration or air conditioning and heating systems. The most common in air conditioning are: on-off cycling, hot gas bypass, use or not of liquid injection, manifold configurations of multiple compressors, mechanical modulation (also called digital), and inverter technology. [citation needed]

Hot gas bypass edit

Hot gas bypass involves injecting a quantity of gas from discharge to the suction side. The compressor will keep operating at the same speed, but due to the bypass, the refrigerant mass flow circulating with the system is reduced, and thus the cooling capacity. This naturally causes the compressor to run uselessly during the periods when the bypass is operating. The turn down capacity varies between 0 and 100%.[80]

Manifold configurations edit

Several compressors can be installed in the system to provide the peak cooling capacity. Each compressor can run or not in order to stage the cooling capacity of the unit. The turn down capacity is either 0/33/66 or 100% for a trio configuration and either 0/50 or 100% for a tandem.[citation needed]

Mechanically modulated compressor edit

This internal mechanical capacity modulation is based on periodic compression process with a control valve, the two scroll set move apart stopping the compression for a given time period. This method varies refrigerant flow by changing the average time of compression, but not the actual speed of the motor. Despite an excellent turndown ratio – from 10 to 100% of the cooling capacity, mechanically modulated scrolls have high energy consumption as the motor continuously runs.[citation needed]

Variable-speed compressor edit

This system uses a variable-frequency drive (also called an Inverter) to control the speed of the compressor. The refrigerant flow rate is changed by the change in the speed of the compressor. The turn down ratio depends on the system configuration and manufacturer. It modulates from 15 or 25% up to 100% at full capacity with a single inverter from 12 to 100% with a hybrid tandem. This method is the most efficient way to modulate an air conditioner's capacity. It is up to 58% more efficient than a fixed speed system.[citation needed]

Social disparities edit

The increased temperatures leading to more extreme heat waves disproportionately affect those in low socioeconomic groups as they lack access to space cooling units.

The cost of having air conditioning in one's residence includes the unit and the high installation, maintenance, and energy consumption. This often leads to disparities in access to cooling, exacerbating inequalities during extreme heat waves. The lack of cooling can be hazardous, as areas with lower use of air conditioning correlate with higher rates of heat-related mortality and hospitalizations.[81] Premature mortality in NYC is projected to grow between 47% and 95% in 30 years, with lower-income and vulnerable populations most at risk.[81] Studies on the correlation between heat-related mortality and hospitalizations and living in low socioeconomic locations can be traced in Phoenix, Arizona,[82] Hong Kong,[83] China,[83] Japan,[84] and Italy.[85][86] Additionally, costs concerning health care can act as another barrier, as the lack of private health insurance during a 2009 heat wave in Australia, was associated with heat-related hospitalization.[86]

Access to air conditioning for marginalized ethnic and racial groups can depend on many factors but is overall linked to one's socioeconomic group and neighborhood. This connection stems from institutionalized racism, which has led to the association of specific marginalized communities with lower economic status, poorer health, residing in hotter neighborhoods, engaging in physically demanding labor, and experiencing limited access to cooling technologies such as air conditioning.[86] A study overlooking Chicago, Illinois, Detroit, and Michigan found that black households were half as likely to have central air conditioning units when compared to their white counterparts.[87] Especially in cities, Redlining creates heat islands, increasing temperatures in certain parts of the city.[86] This is due to materials heat-absorbing building materials and pavements and lack of vegetation and shade coverage.[88]

There have been initiatives that provide energy-efficient cooling solutions to low-income communities or support inclusive design practices to help bridge gaps and reduce inequalities. For instance, public cooling spaces.[89][88]

Impact edit

Health effects edit

 
Rooftop condenser unit fitted on top of an Osaka Municipal Subway 10 series subway carriage. Air conditioning has become increasingly prevalent on public transport vehicles as a form of climate control, and to ensure passenger comfort and drivers' occupational safety and health.

In hot weather, air conditioning can prevent heat stroke,[89] dehydration from excessive perspiration,[89] fluid and electrolyte disorders,[89] kidney failure,[89] and other problems related to hyperthermia.[90] Heat waves are the most lethal type of weather phenomenon in the United States.[91][92] A 2020 study found that areas with lower use of air conditioning correlated with higher rates of heat-related mortality and hospitalizations.[81] The August 2003 France heatwave resulted in approximately 15,000 deaths, where 80% of the victims were over 75 years old.[89] In response, the French government required all retirement homes to have at least one air-conditioned room at 25 °C (77 °F) per floor during heatwaves.[89]

Air conditioning (including filtration, humidification, cooling and disinfection) can be used to provide a clean, safe, hypoallergenic atmosphere in hospital operating rooms and other environments where proper atmosphere is critical to patient safety and well-being. It is sometimes recommended for home use by people with allergies, especially mold.[93][94] However, poorly maintained water cooling towers can promote the growth and spread of microorganisms such as Legionella pneumophila, the infectious agent responsible for Legionnaires' disease. As long as the cooling tower is kept clean (usually by means of a chlorine treatment), these health hazards can be avoided or reduced. The state of New York has codified requirements for registration, maintenance, and testing of cooling towers to protect against Legionella.[95]

Economic effects edit

First designed to benefit targeted industries such as the press as well as large factories, the invention quickly spread to public agencies and administrations with studies with claims of increased productivity close to 24% in places equipped with air conditioning.[96]

Air conditioning caused various shifts in demography, notably that of the United States starting from the 1970s.In the US, the birth rate was lower in the spring than during other seasons until the 1970s but this difference then declined since then.[97] As of 2007, the Sun Belt contained 30% of the total US population while it was inhabited by 24% of Americans at the beginning of the 20th century.[98] Moreover, the summer mortality rate in the US, which had been higher in regions subject to a heat wave during the summer, also evened out.[99]

The spread of the use of air conditioning acts as a main driver for the growth of global demand of electricity.[100] According to the 2018 report from the International Energy Agency (IEA), it was revealed that the energy consumption for cooling in the United States, involving 328 million Americans, surpasses the combined energy consumption of 4.4 billion people in Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, and Asia (excluding China).[89] A 2020 survey found that an estimated 88% of all US households use AC, increasing to 93% when solely looking at homes built between 2010 and 2020.[101]

Environmental effects edit

 
Air conditioner farm in the facade of a building in Singapore

Current air conditioning accounts for 20% of energy consumption in buildings globally, and the expected growth of the usage of air conditioning due to climate change and technology uptake will drive significant energy demand growth.[102][103]

It is projected that by 2050, with the progress currently seen, greenhouse gas emissions attributable to space cooling will double: 1,135 million tons (2016) to 2,070 million tons.[89] There is some push to increase the energy efficiency of air conditioners. United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the IEA found that if air conditioners could be twice as effective as now, 460 billion tons of GHG could be cut over 40 years.[104] The UNEP and IEA also recommended legislation to decrease the use of hydrofluorocarbons, better building insulation, and more sustainable temperature-controlled food supply chains going forward.[104]

Refrigerants have also caused and continue to cause serious environmental issues, including ozone depletion and climate change, as several countries have not yet ratified the Kigali Amendment to reduce the consumption and production of hydrofluorocarbons.[105]

Alternatives to continual air conditioning include passive cooling, passive solar cooling, natural ventilation, operating shades to reduce solar gain, using trees, architectural shades, windows (and using window coatings) to reduce solar gain.[citation needed]

Other techniques edit

Buildings designed with passive air conditioning are generally less expensive to construct and maintain than buildings with conventional HVAC systems with lower energy demands.[106] While tens of air changes per hour, and cooling of tens of degrees, can be achieved with passive methods, site-specific microclimate must be taken into account, complicating building design.[14]

Many techniques can be used to increase comfort and reduce the temperature in buildings. These include evaporative cooling, selective shading, wind, thermal convection, and heat storage.[107]

Passive ventilation edit

 
The ventilation system of a regular earthship
 
Dogtrot houses are designed to maximise natural ventilation.
 
A roof turbine ventilator, colloquially known as a 'Whirly Bird' is an application of wind driven ventilation.

Passive ventilation is the process of supplying air to and removing air from an indoor space without using mechanical systems. It refers to the flow of external air to an indoor space as a result of pressure differences arising from natural forces.

There are two types of natural ventilation occurring in buildings: wind driven ventilation and buoyancy-driven ventilation. Wind driven ventilation arises from the different pressures created by wind around a building or structure, and openings being formed on the perimeter which then permit flow through the building. Buoyancy-driven ventilation occurs as a result of the directional buoyancy force that results from temperature differences between the interior and exterior.[108]

Since the internal heat gains which create temperature differences between the interior and exterior are created by natural processes, including the heat from people, and wind effects are variable, naturally ventilated buildings are sometimes called "breathing buildings".

Passive cooling edit

 
A traditional Iranian solar cooling design using a wind tower

Passive cooling is a building design approach that focuses on heat gain control and heat dissipation in a building in order to improve the indoor thermal comfort with low or no energy consumption.[109][110] This approach works either by preventing heat from entering the interior (heat gain prevention) or by removing heat from the building (natural cooling).[111]

Natural cooling utilizes on-site energy, available from the natural environment, combined with the architectural design of building components (e.g. building envelope), rather than mechanical systems to dissipate heat.[112] Therefore, natural cooling depends not only on the architectural design of the building but on how the site's natural resources are used as heat sinks (i.e. everything that absorbs or dissipates heat). Examples of on-site heat sinks are the upper atmosphere (night sky), the outdoor air (wind), and the earth/soil.

Passive cooling is an important tool for design of buildings for climate change adaptation – reducing dependency on energy-intensive air conditioning in warming environments.[113][114]
 
A pair of short windcatchers (malqaf) used in traditional architecture; wind is forced down on the windward side and leaves on the leeward side (cross-ventilation). In the absence of wind, the circulation can be driven with evaporative cooling in the inlet (which is also designed to catch dust). In the center, a shuksheika (roof lantern vent), used to shade the qa'a below while allowing hot air rise out of it (stack effect).[13]

Daytime radiative cooling edit

 
Passive daytime radiative cooling (PDRC) surfaces are high in solar reflectance and heat emittance, cooling with zero energy use or pollution.[115]

Passive daytime radiative cooling (PDRC) surfaces reflect incoming solar radiation and heat back into outer space through the infrared window for cooling during the daytime. Daytime radiative cooling became possible with the ability to suppress solar heating using photonic structures, which emerged through a study by Raman et al. (2014).[116] PDRCs can come in a variety of forms, including paint coatings and films, that are designed to be high in solar reflectance and thermal emittance.[115][117]

PDRC applications on building roofs and envelopes have demonstrated significant decreases in energy consumption and costs.[117] In suburban single-family residential areas, PDRC application on roofs can potentially lower energy costs by 26% to 46%.[118] PDRCs are predicted to show a market size of ~$27 billion for indoor space cooling by 2025 and have undergone a surge in research and development since the 2010s.[119][120]

Fans edit

Hand fans have existed since prehistory. Large human-powered fans built into buildings include the punkah.

The 2nd-century Chinese inventor Ding Huan of the Han dynasty invented a rotary fan for air conditioning, with seven wheels 3 m (10 ft) in diameter and manually powered by prisoners.[121]: 99, 151, 233  In 747, Emperor Xuanzong (r. 712–762) of the Tang dynasty (618–907) had the Cool Hall (Liang Dian 涼殿) built in the imperial palace, which the Tang Yulin describes as having water-powered fan wheels for air conditioning as well as rising jet streams of water from fountains. During the subsequent Song dynasty (960–1279), written sources mentioned the air conditioning rotary fan as even more widely used.[121]: 134, 151 

Thermal buffering edit

In areas that are cold at night or in winter, heat storage is used. Heat may be stored in earth or masonry; air is drawn past the masonry to heat or cool it.[15]

In areas that are below freezing at night in winter, snow and ice can be collected and stored in ice houses for later use in cooling.[15] This technique is over 3,700 years old in the Middle East.[122] Harvesting outdoor ice during winter and transporting and storing for use in summer was practiced by wealthy Europeans in the early 1600s,[18] and became popular in Europe and the Americas towards the end of the 1600s.[123] This practice was replaced by mechanical compression-cycle icemakers.

Evaporative cooling edit

 
An evaporative cooler

In dry, hot climates, the evaporative cooling effect may be used by placing water at the air intake, such that the draft draws air over water and then into the house. For this reason, it is sometimes said that the fountain, in the architecture of hot, arid climates, is like the fireplace in the architecture of cold climates.[13] Evaporative cooling also makes the air more humid, which can be beneficial in a dry desert climate.[124]

Evaporative coolers tend to feel as if they are not working during times of high humidity, when there is not much dry air with which the coolers can work to make the air as cool as possible for dwelling occupants. Unlike other types of air conditioners, evaporative coolers rely on the outside air to be channeled through cooler pads that cool the air before it reaches the inside of a house through its air duct system; this cooled outside air must be allowed to push the warmer air within the house out through an exhaust opening such as an open door or window.[125]

See also edit

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External links edit

  • U.S. patent 808,897 Carrier's original patent
  • U.S. patent 1,172,429
  • U.S. patent 2,363,294
  • Scientific American, "Artificial Cold", 28 August 1880, p. 138
  • Scientific American, "The Presidential Cold Air Machine", 6 August 1881, p. 84

conditioning, this, article, about, cooling, curved, album, conditioning, album, redirects, here, abbreviation, used, banking, book, keeping, account, disambiguation, other, uses, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, . This article is about cooling of air For the Curved Air album see Air Conditioning album a c redirects here For the abbreviation used in banking and book keeping see Account disambiguation For other uses see AC This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is The tables need to be rearranged and the sorting system needs to be improved based on existing information Please help improve this article if you can November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Air conditioning news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message For a similar device capable of both cooling and heating see heat pump Air conditioning often abbreviated as A C US or air con UK 1 is the process of removing heat from an enclosed space to achieve a more comfortable interior environment sometimes referred to as comfort cooling and in some cases also strictly controlling the humidity of internal air Air conditioning can be achieved using a mechanical air conditioner or by other methods including passive cooling and ventilative cooling 2 3 Air conditioning is a member of a family of systems and techniques that provide heating ventilation and air conditioning HVAC 4 Heat pumps are similar in many ways to air conditioners but use a reversing valve to allow them both to heat and to cool an enclosed space 5 There are various types of air conditioners Popular examples include Window mounted air conditioner for single room use Suriname 1955 Ceiling mounted cassette air conditioner China 2023 Wall mounted air conditioner Japan 2020 and ceiling mounted console Also called ceiling suspended air conditioner China 2023 Air conditioners which typically use vapor compression refrigeration range in size from small units used in vehicles or single rooms to massive units that can cool large buildings 6 Air source heat pumps which can be used for heating as well as cooling are becoming increasingly common in cooler climates According to the International Energy Agency IEA as of 2018 1 6 billion air conditioning units were installed which accounted for an estimated 20 of electricity usage in buildings globally with the number expected to grow to 5 6 billion by 2050 7 The United Nations called for the technology to be made more sustainable to mitigate climate change and for the use of alternatives like passive cooling evaporative cooling selective shading windcatchers and better thermal insulation CFC and HCFC refrigerants such as R 12 and R 22 respectively used within air conditioners have caused damage to the ozone layer 8 and HFC refrigerants such as R 410a and R 404a which were designed to replace CFCs and HCFCs are instead exacerbating climate change 9 Both issues happen due to the venting of refrigerant to the atmosphere such as during repairs HFO refrigerants used in some if not most new equipment solve both issues with an ozone damage potential ODP of zero and a much lower global warming potential GWP in the single or double digits vs the three or four digits of HFCs 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Development 1 1 1 Preceding discoveries 1 1 2 First devices 1 1 3 Further development 2 Operation 2 1 Operating principles 2 1 1 Heating 2 2 Performance 3 Control system 3 1 Wireless remote control 3 2 Wired controller 4 Types 4 1 Mini split and multi split systems 4 2 Ducted central systems 4 3 Central plant cooling 4 4 Portable units 4 5 Window unit and packaged terminal 4 6 Packaged air conditioner 5 Types of compressors 5 1 Reciprocating 5 2 Scroll 5 3 Screw 6 Capacity modulation technologies 6 1 Hot gas bypass 6 2 Manifold configurations 6 3 Mechanically modulated compressor 6 4 Variable speed compressor 7 Social disparities 8 Impact 8 1 Health effects 8 2 Economic effects 8 3 Environmental effects 9 Other techniques 9 1 Passive ventilation 9 2 Passive cooling 9 3 Daytime radiative cooling 9 4 Fans 9 5 Thermal buffering 9 6 Evaporative cooling 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory editAir conditioning dates back to prehistory 11 Double walled living quarters with a gap between the two walls to encourage air flow were found in the ancient city of Hamoukar in modern Syria 12 Ancient Egyptian buildings also used a wide variety of passive air conditioning techniques 13 These became widespread from the Iberian Peninsula through North Africa the Middle East and Northern India 14 Passive techniques remained widespread until the 20th century when they fell out of fashion and were replaced by powered air conditioning Using information from engineering studies of traditional buildings passive techniques are being revived and modified for 21st century architectural designs 15 14 nbsp An array of air conditioner condenser units outside a commercial office buildingAir conditioners allow the building s indoor environment to remain relatively constant largely independent of changes in external weather conditions and internal heat loads They also enable deep plan buildings to be created and have allowed people to live comfortably in hotter parts of the world but have now come under criticism for contributing significantly to climate change due to their high electricity consumption and the warming of their immediate surroundings in large cities 16 17 Development edit Preceding discoveries edit In 1558 Giambattista della Porta described a method of chilling ice to temperatures far below its freezing point by mixing it with potassium nitrate then called nitre in his popular science book Natural Magic 18 19 20 In 1620 Cornelis Drebbel demonstrated Turning Summer into Winter for James I of England chilling part of the Great Hall of Westminster Abbey with an apparatus of troughs and vats 21 Drebbel s contemporary Francis Bacon like della Porta a believer in science communication may not have been present at the demonstration but in a book published later the same year he described it as experiment of artificial freezing and said that Nitre or rather its spirit is very cold and hence nitre or salt when added to snow or ice intensifies the cold of the latter the nitre by adding to its cold but the salt by supplying activity to the cold of the snow 18 In 1758 Benjamin Franklin and John Hadley a chemistry professor at the University of Cambridge conducted experiments applying the principle of evaporation as a means to cool an object rapidly Franklin and Hadley confirmed that the evaporation of highly volatile liquids such as alcohol and ether could be used to drive down the temperature of an object past the freezing point of water They experimented with the bulb of a mercury in glass thermometer as their object They used a bellows to speed up the evaporation They lowered the temperature of the thermometer bulb down to 14 C 7 F while the ambient temperature was 18 C 64 F Franklin noted that soon after they passed the freezing point of water 0 C 32 F a thin film of ice formed on the surface of the thermometer s bulb and that the ice mass was about 6 mm 1 4 in thick when they stopped the experiment upon reaching 14 C 7 F Franklin concluded From this experiment one may see the possibility of freezing a man to death on a warm summer s day 22 The 19th century included many developments in compression technology In 1820 English scientist and inventor Michael Faraday discovered that compressing and liquefying ammonia could chill air when the liquefied ammonia was allowed to evaporate 23 In 1842 Florida physician John Gorrie used compressor technology to create ice which he used to cool air for his patients in his hospital in Apalachicola Florida He hoped to eventually use his ice making machine to regulate the temperature of buildings 23 24 He envisioned centralized air conditioning that could cool entire cities Gorrie was granted a patent in 1851 but following the death of his main backer he was not able to realize his invention 25 In 1851 James Harrison created the first mechanical ice making machine in Geelong Australia and was granted a patent for an ether vapor compression refrigeration system in 1855 that produced three tons of ice per day 26 In 1860 Harrison established a second ice company He later entered the debate over competing against the American advantage of ice refrigerated beef sales to the United Kingdom 26 First devices edit nbsp Willis Carrier who is credited with building the first modern electrical air conditioning unitElectricity made the development of effective units possible In 1901 American inventor Willis H Carrier built what is considered the first modern electrical air conditioning unit 27 28 29 30 In 1902 he installed his first air conditioning system in the Sackett Wilhelms Lithographing amp Publishing Company in Brooklyn New York 31 His invention controlled both the temperature and humidity which helped maintain consistent paper dimensions and ink alignment at the printing plant Later together with six other employees Carrier formed The Carrier Air Conditioning Company of America a business that in 2020 employed 53 000 people and was valued at 18 6 billion 32 33 In 1906 Stuart W Cramer of Charlotte North Carolina was exploring ways to add moisture to the air in his textile mill Cramer coined the term air conditioning by it in a patent claim he filed that year as analogous to water conditioning then a well known process for making textiles easier to process He combined moisture with ventilation to condition and change the air in the factories thus controlling the humidity that is necessary in textile plants Willis Carrier adopted the term and incorporated it into the name of his company 34 Domestic air conditioning soon took off In 1914 the first domestic air conditioning was installed in Minneapolis in the home of Charles Gilbert Gates It is however possible that the considerable device c 2 1 m 1 8 m 6 1 m 7 ft 6 ft 20 ft was never used as the house remained uninhabited 23 Gates had already died in October 1913 In 1931 H H Schultz and J Q Sherman developed what would become the most common type of individual room air conditioner one designed to sit on a window ledge The units went on sale in 1932 at US 10 000 to 50 000 the equivalent of 200 000 to 1 100 000 in 2023 23 A year later the first air conditioning systems for cars were offered for sale 35 Chrysler Motors introduced the first practical semi portable air conditioning unit in 1935 36 and Packard became the first automobile manufacturer to offer an air conditioning unit in its cars in 1939 37 Further development edit Innovations in the latter half of the 20th century allowed more ubiquitous air conditioner use In 1945 Robert Sherman of Lynn Massachusetts invented a portable in window air conditioner that cooled heated humidified dehumidified and filtered the air 38 The first inverter air conditioners were released in 1980 1981 39 40 As international development has increased wealth across countries global use of air conditioners has increased By 2018 an estimated 1 6 billion air conditioning units were installed worldwide 41 with the International Energy Agency expecting this number to grow to 5 6 billion units by 2050 7 Between 1995 and 2004 the proportion of urban households in China with air conditioners increased from 8 to 70 42 As of 2015 nearly 100 million homes or about 87 of US households had air conditioning systems 43 In 2019 it was estimated that 90 of new single family homes constructed in the US included air conditioning ranging from 99 in the South to 62 in the West 44 45 Operation editOperating principles edit Main article Vapor compression refrigeration nbsp A simple stylized diagram of the refrigeration cycle 1 condensing coil 2 expansion valve 3 evaporator coil 4 compressorCooling in traditional air conditioner systems is accomplished using the vapor compression cycle which uses a refrigerant s forced circulation and phase change between gas and liquid to transfer heat 46 47 The vapor compression cycle can occur within a unitary or packaged piece of equipment or within a chiller that is connected to terminal cooling equipment such as a fan coil unit in an air handler on its evaporator side and heat rejection equipment such as a cooling tower on its condenser side An air source heat pump shares many components with an air conditioning system but includes a reversing valve which allows the unit to be used to heat as well as cool a space 48 Air conditioning equipment will reduce the absolute humidity of the air processed by the system if the surface of the evaporator coil is significantly cooler than the dew point of the surrounding air An air conditioner designed for an occupied space will typically achieve a 30 to 60 relative humidity in the occupied space 49 Most modern air conditioning systems feature a dehumidification cycle during which the compressor runs At the same time the fan is slowed to reduce the evaporator temperature and condense more water A dehumidifier uses the same refrigeration cycle but incorporates both the evaporator and the condenser into the same air path the air first passes over the evaporator coil where it is cooled 50 and dehumidified before passes over the condenser coil where it is warmed again before being released back into the room again citation needed Free cooling can sometimes be selected when the external air is cooler than the internal air Therefore the compressor does not need to be used resulting in high cooling efficiencies for these times This may also be combined with seasonal thermal energy storage 51 Heating edit Main article Heat pump Some air conditioning systems can reverse the refrigeration cycle and act as an air source heat pump thus heating instead of cooling the indoor environment They are also commonly referred to as reverse cycle air conditioners The heat pump is significantly more energy efficient than electric resistance heating because it moves energy from air or groundwater to the heated space and the heat from purchased electrical energy When the heat pump is in heating mode the indoor evaporator coil switches roles and becomes the condenser coil producing heat The outdoor condenser unit also switches roles to serve as the evaporator and discharges cold air colder than the ambient outdoor air Most air source heat pumps become less efficient in outdoor temperatures lower than 4 C or 40 F 52 This is partly because ice forms on the outdoor unit s heat exchanger coil which blocks air flow over the coil To compensate for this the heat pump system must temporarily switch back into the regular air conditioning mode to switch the outdoor evaporator coil back to the condenser coil to heat up and defrost Therefore some heat pump systems will have electric resistance heating in the indoor air path that is activated only in this mode to compensate for the temporary indoor air cooling which would otherwise be uncomfortable in the winter Newer models have improved cold weather performance with efficient heating capacity down to 14 F 26 C 53 52 54 However there is always a chance that the humidity that condenses on the heat exchanger of the outdoor unit could freeze even in models that have improved cold weather performance requiring a defrosting cycle to be performed The icing problem becomes much more severe with lower outdoor temperatures so heat pumps are sometimes installed in tandem with a more conventional form of heating such as an electrical heater a natural gas heating oil or wood burning fireplace or central heating which is used instead of or in addition to the heat pump during harsher winter temperatures In this case the heat pump is used efficiently during milder temperatures and the system is switched to the conventional heat source when the outdoor temperature is lower Performance edit Main articles coefficient of performance Seasonal energy efficiency ratio and European seasonal energy efficiency ratio The coefficient of performance COP of an air conditioning system is a ratio of useful heating or cooling provided to the work required 55 56 Higher COPs equate to lower operating costs The COP usually exceeds 1 however the exact value is highly dependent on operating conditions especially absolute temperature and relative temperature between sink and system and is often graphed or averaged against expected conditions 57 Air conditioner equipment power in the U S is often described in terms of tons of refrigeration with each approximately equal to the cooling power of one short ton 2 000 pounds 910 kg of ice melting in a 24 hour period The value is equal to 12 000 BTUIT per hour or 3 517 watts 58 Residential central air systems are usually from 1 to 5 tons 3 5 to 18 kW in capacity citation needed The efficiency of air conditioners is often rated by the seasonal energy efficiency ratio SEER which is defined by the Air Conditioning Heating and Refrigeration Institute in its 2008 standard AHRI 210 240 Performance Rating of Unitary Air Conditioning and Air Source Heat Pump Equipment 59 A similar standard is the European seasonal energy efficiency ratio ESEER citation needed Control system editWireless remote control edit Main articles Remote control and Infrared blaster nbsp A wireless remote controller nbsp The infrared transmitting LED on the remote nbsp The infrared receiver on the A C This type of controller uses an infrared LED to relay commands from a remote control to the air conditioner The output of the infrared LED like that of any infrared remote is invisible to the human eye because its wavelength is beyond the range of visible light This controller is commonly used on mini split air conditioners because it is simple and portable Wired controller edit Main article Thermostat nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Several wired controllers Indonesia 2024 A wired controller also called a wired thermostat is a device that controls an air conditioner by switching heating or cooling on or off It uses different sensors types to measure temperatures and actuate control operations Mechanical thermostats commonly use bimetallic strips converting a temperature change into mechanical displacement to actuate control of the air conditioner Electronic thermostats instead use a thermistor or other semiconductor sensor processing temperature change as electronic signals to control the air conditioner These controllers are usually used in hotel rooms because they are permanently installed into a wall and hard wired directly into the air conditioner unit eliminating the need for batteries Types editTypes Typical Capacity Air supply Mounting Typical applicationMini split small large Direct Wall ResidentialWindow very small small Direct Window ResidentialPortable very small small Direct Ducted Floor Residential remote areasDucted individual small very large Ducted Ceiling Residential commercialDucted central medium very large Ducted Ceiling Residential commercialCeiling suspended medium large Direct Ceiling CommercialCassette medium large Direct Ducted Ceiling CommercialFloor standing medium large Direct Ducted Floor CommercialPackaged very large Direct Ducted Floor CommercialPackaged RTU Rooftop Unit very large Ducted Rooftop Commercial where the typical capacity is in kilowatt as follows very small lt 1 5 kw small 1 5 3 5 kw medium 4 2 7 1 kw large 7 2 14 kw very large 14 gt kwMini split and multi split systems edit nbsp Evaporator indoor unit or terminal side of a ductless split type air conditionerDuctless systems often mini split though there are now ducted mini split typically supply conditioned and heated air to a single or a few rooms of a building without ducts and in a decentralized manner 60 Multi zone or multi split systems are a common application of ductless systems and allow up to eight rooms zones or locations to be conditioned independently from each other each with its indoor unit and simultaneously from a single outdoor unit The first mini split system was sold in 1961 by Toshiba in Japan and the first wall mounted mini split air conditioner was sold in 1968 in Japan by Mitsubishi Electric where small home sizes motivated their development The Mitsubishi model was the first air conditioner with a cross flow fan 61 62 63 In 1969 the first mini split air conditioner was sold in the US 64 Multi zone ductless systems were invented by Daikin in 1973 and variable refrigerant flow systems which can be thought of as larger multi split systems were also invented by Daikin in 1982 Both were first sold in Japan 65 Variable refrigerant flow systems when compared with central plant cooling from an air handler eliminate the need for large cool air ducts air handlers and chillers instead cool refrigerant is transported through much smaller pipes to the indoor units in the spaces to be conditioned thus allowing for less space above dropped ceilings and a lower structural impact while also allowing for more individual and independent temperature control of spaces The outdoor and indoor units can be spread across the building 66 Variable refrigerant flow indoor units can also be turned off individually in unused spaces citation needed The lower start up power of VRF s DC inverter compressors and their inherent DC power requirements also allow VRF solar powered heat pumps to be run using DC providing solar panels Ducted central systems edit Split system central air conditioners consist of two heat exchangers an outside unit the condenser from which heat is rejected to the environment and an internal heat exchanger the fan coil unit FCU air handling unit or evaporator with the piped refrigerant being circulated between the two The FCU is then connected to the spaces to be cooled by ventilation ducts 67 Central plant cooling edit See also Chiller nbsp An industrial air conditioning unit on top of the shopping mall Passage in Linz AustriaLarge central cooling plants may use intermediate coolant such as chilled water pumped into air handlers or fan coil units near or in the spaces to be cooled which then duct or deliver cold air into the spaces to be conditioned rather than ducting cold air directly to these spaces from the plant which is not done due to the low density and heat capacity of air which would require impractically large ducts The chilled water is cooled by chillers in the plant which uses a refrigeration cycle to cool water often transferring its heat to the atmosphere even in liquid cooled chillers through the use of cooling towers Chillers may be air or liquid cooled citation needed Portable units edit A portable system has an indoor unit on wheels connected to an outdoor unit via flexible pipes similar to a permanently fixed installed unit such as a ductless split air conditioner Hose systems which can be monoblock or air to air are vented to the outside via air ducts The monoblock type collects the water in a bucket or tray and stops when full The air to air type re evaporates the water discharges it through the ducted hose and can run continuously Such portable units draw indoor air and expel it outdoors through a single duct negatively impacting their overall cooling efficiency Many portable air conditioners come with heat as well as a dehumidification function 68 Window unit and packaged terminal edit nbsp Through the wall PTAC units University Motor Inn PhiladelphiaMain article Packaged terminal air conditioner The packaged terminal air conditioner PTAC through the wall and window air conditioners are similar These units are installed on a window frame or on a wall opening The unit usually has an internal partition separating its indoor and outdoor sides which contain the unit s condenser and evaporator respectively PTAC systems may be adapted to provide heating in cold weather either directly by using an electric strip gas or other heaters or by reversing the refrigerant flow to heat the interior and draw heat from the exterior air converting the air conditioner into a heat pump They may be installed in a wall opening with the help of a special sleeve on the wall and a custom grill that is flush with the wall and window air conditioners can also be installed in a window but without a custom grill 69 Packaged air conditioner edit Packaged air conditioners also known as self contained units 70 71 are central systems that integrate into a single housing all the components of a split central system and deliver air possibly through ducts to the spaces to be cooled Depending on their construction they may be outdoors or indoors on roofs rooftop units 72 73 draw the air to be conditioned from inside or outside a building and be water or air cooled Often outdoor units are air cooled while indoor units are liquid cooled using a cooling tower 67 74 75 76 77 78 Types of compressors editCompressor types Common aplications Typical capacity Efficiency Durability RepairabilityReciprocating Refrigerator Walk in freezer portable air conditioners small large very low small capacity medium large capacity very low mediumRotary vane Residential mini splits small low low easyScroll Commercial and central systems VRF medium medium medium easyRotary screw Commercial chiller medium large medium medium hardCentrifugal Commercial chiller very large medium high hardMaglev Centrifugal Commercial chiller very large high very high very hardReciprocating edit Main article Reciprocating compressorThis compressor consists of a crankcase crankshaft piston rod piston piston ring cylinder head and valves citation needed Scroll edit Main article Scroll compressorThis compressor uses two interleaving scrolls to compress the refrigerant 79 it consists of one fixed and one orbiting scrolls This type of compressor is more efficient because it has 70 percent less moving parts than a reciprocating compressor citation needed Screw edit Main article Rotary screw compressor This compressor use two very closely meshing spiral rotors to compress the gas The gas enters at the suction side and moves through the threads as the screws rotate The meshing rotors force the gas through the compressor and the gas exits at the end of the screws The working area is the inter lobe volume between the male and female rotors It is larger at the intake end and decreases along the length of the rotors until the exhaust port This change in volume is the compression citation needed Capacity modulation technologies editThere are several ways to modulate the cooling capacity in refrigeration or air conditioning and heating systems The most common in air conditioning are on off cycling hot gas bypass use or not of liquid injection manifold configurations of multiple compressors mechanical modulation also called digital and inverter technology citation needed Hot gas bypass edit Hot gas bypass involves injecting a quantity of gas from discharge to the suction side The compressor will keep operating at the same speed but due to the bypass the refrigerant mass flow circulating with the system is reduced and thus the cooling capacity This naturally causes the compressor to run uselessly during the periods when the bypass is operating The turn down capacity varies between 0 and 100 80 Manifold configurations edit Several compressors can be installed in the system to provide the peak cooling capacity Each compressor can run or not in order to stage the cooling capacity of the unit The turn down capacity is either 0 33 66 or 100 for a trio configuration and either 0 50 or 100 for a tandem citation needed Mechanically modulated compressor edit This internal mechanical capacity modulation is based on periodic compression process with a control valve the two scroll set move apart stopping the compression for a given time period This method varies refrigerant flow by changing the average time of compression but not the actual speed of the motor Despite an excellent turndown ratio from 10 to 100 of the cooling capacity mechanically modulated scrolls have high energy consumption as the motor continuously runs citation needed Variable speed compressor edit Main article Inverter compressorThis system uses a variable frequency drive also called an Inverter to control the speed of the compressor The refrigerant flow rate is changed by the change in the speed of the compressor The turn down ratio depends on the system configuration and manufacturer It modulates from 15 or 25 up to 100 at full capacity with a single inverter from 12 to 100 with a hybrid tandem This method is the most efficient way to modulate an air conditioner s capacity It is up to 58 more efficient than a fixed speed system citation needed Social disparities editThe increased temperatures leading to more extreme heat waves disproportionately affect those in low socioeconomic groups as they lack access to space cooling units The cost of having air conditioning in one s residence includes the unit and the high installation maintenance and energy consumption This often leads to disparities in access to cooling exacerbating inequalities during extreme heat waves The lack of cooling can be hazardous as areas with lower use of air conditioning correlate with higher rates of heat related mortality and hospitalizations 81 Premature mortality in NYC is projected to grow between 47 and 95 in 30 years with lower income and vulnerable populations most at risk 81 Studies on the correlation between heat related mortality and hospitalizations and living in low socioeconomic locations can be traced in Phoenix Arizona 82 Hong Kong 83 China 83 Japan 84 and Italy 85 86 Additionally costs concerning health care can act as another barrier as the lack of private health insurance during a 2009 heat wave in Australia was associated with heat related hospitalization 86 Access to air conditioning for marginalized ethnic and racial groups can depend on many factors but is overall linked to one s socioeconomic group and neighborhood This connection stems from institutionalized racism which has led to the association of specific marginalized communities with lower economic status poorer health residing in hotter neighborhoods engaging in physically demanding labor and experiencing limited access to cooling technologies such as air conditioning 86 A study overlooking Chicago Illinois Detroit and Michigan found that black households were half as likely to have central air conditioning units when compared to their white counterparts 87 Especially in cities Redlining creates heat islands increasing temperatures in certain parts of the city 86 This is due to materials heat absorbing building materials and pavements and lack of vegetation and shade coverage 88 There have been initiatives that provide energy efficient cooling solutions to low income communities or support inclusive design practices to help bridge gaps and reduce inequalities For instance public cooling spaces 89 88 Impact editHealth effects edit nbsp Rooftop condenser unit fitted on top of an Osaka Municipal Subway 10 series subway carriage Air conditioning has become increasingly prevalent on public transport vehicles as a form of climate control and to ensure passenger comfort and drivers occupational safety and health In hot weather air conditioning can prevent heat stroke 89 dehydration from excessive perspiration 89 fluid and electrolyte disorders 89 kidney failure 89 and other problems related to hyperthermia 90 Heat waves are the most lethal type of weather phenomenon in the United States 91 92 A 2020 study found that areas with lower use of air conditioning correlated with higher rates of heat related mortality and hospitalizations 81 The August 2003 France heatwave resulted in approximately 15 000 deaths where 80 of the victims were over 75 years old 89 In response the French government required all retirement homes to have at least one air conditioned room at 25 C 77 F per floor during heatwaves 89 Air conditioning including filtration humidification cooling and disinfection can be used to provide a clean safe hypoallergenic atmosphere in hospital operating rooms and other environments where proper atmosphere is critical to patient safety and well being It is sometimes recommended for home use by people with allergies especially mold 93 94 However poorly maintained water cooling towers can promote the growth and spread of microorganisms such as Legionella pneumophila the infectious agent responsible for Legionnaires disease As long as the cooling tower is kept clean usually by means of a chlorine treatment these health hazards can be avoided or reduced The state of New York has codified requirements for registration maintenance and testing of cooling towers to protect against Legionella 95 Economic effects edit First designed to benefit targeted industries such as the press as well as large factories the invention quickly spread to public agencies and administrations with studies with claims of increased productivity close to 24 in places equipped with air conditioning 96 Air conditioning caused various shifts in demography notably that of the United States starting from the 1970s In the US the birth rate was lower in the spring than during other seasons until the 1970s but this difference then declined since then 97 As of 2007 the Sun Belt contained 30 of the total US population while it was inhabited by 24 of Americans at the beginning of the 20th century 98 Moreover the summer mortality rate in the US which had been higher in regions subject to a heat wave during the summer also evened out 99 The spread of the use of air conditioning acts as a main driver for the growth of global demand of electricity 100 According to the 2018 report from the International Energy Agency IEA it was revealed that the energy consumption for cooling in the United States involving 328 million Americans surpasses the combined energy consumption of 4 4 billion people in Africa Latin America the Middle East and Asia excluding China 89 A 2020 survey found that an estimated 88 of all US households use AC increasing to 93 when solely looking at homes built between 2010 and 2020 101 Environmental effects edit nbsp Air conditioner farm in the facade of a building in SingaporeCurrent air conditioning accounts for 20 of energy consumption in buildings globally and the expected growth of the usage of air conditioning due to climate change and technology uptake will drive significant energy demand growth 102 103 It is projected that by 2050 with the progress currently seen greenhouse gas emissions attributable to space cooling will double 1 135 million tons 2016 to 2 070 million tons 89 There is some push to increase the energy efficiency of air conditioners United Nations Environment Programme UNEP and the IEA found that if air conditioners could be twice as effective as now 460 billion tons of GHG could be cut over 40 years 104 The UNEP and IEA also recommended legislation to decrease the use of hydrofluorocarbons better building insulation and more sustainable temperature controlled food supply chains going forward 104 Refrigerants have also caused and continue to cause serious environmental issues including ozone depletion and climate change as several countries have not yet ratified the Kigali Amendment to reduce the consumption and production of hydrofluorocarbons 105 Alternatives to continual air conditioning include passive cooling passive solar cooling natural ventilation operating shades to reduce solar gain using trees architectural shades windows and using window coatings to reduce solar gain citation needed Other techniques editBuildings designed with passive air conditioning are generally less expensive to construct and maintain than buildings with conventional HVAC systems with lower energy demands 106 While tens of air changes per hour and cooling of tens of degrees can be achieved with passive methods site specific microclimate must be taken into account complicating building design 14 Many techniques can be used to increase comfort and reduce the temperature in buildings These include evaporative cooling selective shading wind thermal convection and heat storage 107 Passive ventilation edit This section is an excerpt from Passive ventilation edit nbsp The ventilation system of a regular earthship nbsp Dogtrot houses are designed to maximise natural ventilation nbsp A roof turbine ventilator colloquially known as a Whirly Bird is an application of wind driven ventilation Passive ventilation is the process of supplying air to and removing air from an indoor space without using mechanical systems It refers to the flow of external air to an indoor space as a result of pressure differences arising from natural forces There are two types of natural ventilation occurring in buildings wind driven ventilation and buoyancy driven ventilation Wind driven ventilation arises from the different pressures created by wind around a building or structure and openings being formed on the perimeter which then permit flow through the building Buoyancy driven ventilation occurs as a result of the directional buoyancy force that results from temperature differences between the interior and exterior 108 Since the internal heat gains which create temperature differences between the interior and exterior are created by natural processes including the heat from people and wind effects are variable naturally ventilated buildings are sometimes called breathing buildings Passive cooling edit This section is an excerpt from Passive cooling edit nbsp A traditional Iranian solar cooling design using a wind towerPassive cooling is a building design approach that focuses on heat gain control and heat dissipation in a building in order to improve the indoor thermal comfort with low or no energy consumption 109 110 This approach works either by preventing heat from entering the interior heat gain prevention or by removing heat from the building natural cooling 111 Natural cooling utilizes on site energy available from the natural environment combined with the architectural design of building components e g building envelope rather than mechanical systems to dissipate heat 112 Therefore natural cooling depends not only on the architectural design of the building but on how the site s natural resources are used as heat sinks i e everything that absorbs or dissipates heat Examples of on site heat sinks are the upper atmosphere night sky the outdoor air wind and the earth soil Passive cooling is an important tool for design of buildings for climate change adaptation reducing dependency on energy intensive air conditioning in warming environments 113 114 nbsp A pair of short windcatchers malqaf used in traditional architecture wind is forced down on the windward side and leaves on the leeward side cross ventilation In the absence of wind the circulation can be driven with evaporative cooling in the inlet which is also designed to catch dust In the center a shuksheika roof lantern vent used to shade the qa a below while allowing hot air rise out of it stack effect 13 Daytime radiative cooling edit nbsp Passive daytime radiative cooling PDRC surfaces are high in solar reflectance and heat emittance cooling with zero energy use or pollution 115 Passive daytime radiative cooling PDRC surfaces reflect incoming solar radiation and heat back into outer space through the infrared window for cooling during the daytime Daytime radiative cooling became possible with the ability to suppress solar heating using photonic structures which emerged through a study by Raman et al 2014 116 PDRCs can come in a variety of forms including paint coatings and films that are designed to be high in solar reflectance and thermal emittance 115 117 PDRC applications on building roofs and envelopes have demonstrated significant decreases in energy consumption and costs 117 In suburban single family residential areas PDRC application on roofs can potentially lower energy costs by 26 to 46 118 PDRCs are predicted to show a market size of 27 billion for indoor space cooling by 2025 and have undergone a surge in research and development since the 2010s 119 120 Fans edit Main article Ceiling fan Hand fans have existed since prehistory Large human powered fans built into buildings include the punkah The 2nd century Chinese inventor Ding Huan of the Han dynasty invented a rotary fan for air conditioning with seven wheels 3 m 10 ft in diameter and manually powered by prisoners 121 99 151 233 In 747 Emperor Xuanzong r 712 762 of the Tang dynasty 618 907 had the Cool Hall Liang Dian 涼殿 built in the imperial palace which the Tang Yulin describes as having water powered fan wheels for air conditioning as well as rising jet streams of water from fountains During the subsequent Song dynasty 960 1279 written sources mentioned the air conditioning rotary fan as even more widely used 121 134 151 Thermal buffering edit In areas that are cold at night or in winter heat storage is used Heat may be stored in earth or masonry air is drawn past the masonry to heat or cool it 15 In areas that are below freezing at night in winter snow and ice can be collected and stored in ice houses for later use in cooling 15 This technique is over 3 700 years old in the Middle East 122 Harvesting outdoor ice during winter and transporting and storing for use in summer was practiced by wealthy Europeans in the early 1600s 18 and became popular in Europe and the Americas towards the end of the 1600s 123 This practice was replaced by mechanical compression cycle icemakers Evaporative cooling edit Main article Evaporative cooler nbsp An evaporative coolerIn dry hot climates the evaporative cooling effect may be used by placing water at the air intake such that the draft draws air over water and then into the house For this reason it is sometimes said that the fountain in the architecture of hot arid climates is like the fireplace in the architecture of cold climates 13 Evaporative cooling also makes the air more humid which can be beneficial in a dry desert climate 124 Evaporative coolers tend to feel as if they are not working during times of high humidity when there is not much dry air with which the coolers can work to make the air as cool as possible for dwelling occupants Unlike other types of air conditioners evaporative coolers rely on the outside air to be channeled through cooler pads that cool the air before it reaches the inside of a house through its air duct system this cooled outside air must be allowed to push the warmer air within the house out through an exhaust opening such as an open door or window 125 See also editAir filter Air purifier Cleanroom Crankcase heater Energy recovery ventilation Indoor air quality ParticulatesReferences edit Air Con Cambridge Dictionary Archived from the original on May 3 2022 Retrieved January 6 2023 Dissertation Abstracts International The humanities and social sciences A University Microfilms 2005 p 3600 Engineers American Society of Heating Refrigerating and Air Conditioning 1993 1993 ASHRAE Handbook Fundamentals ASHRAE ISBN 978 0 910110 97 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Enteria Napoleon Sawachi Takao Saito Kiyoshi January 31 2023 Variable Refrigerant Flow Systems Advances and Applications of VRF Springer Nature p 46 ISBN 978 981 19 6833 4 Agencies United States Congress House Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on Dept of the Interior and Related 1988 Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations for 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