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Anhydrous Ammonia (NH 3 ) as a Refrigerant An Overview

Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

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Page 1: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Anhydrous Ammonia (NH3) as a Refrigerant

An Overview

Page 2: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Introduction:

What is Ammonia?Why is it used as a refrigerant?What are some of it’s properties?How does it compare to other refrigerants?Is it safe?

Page 3: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Also known as R-717

It is a single component refrigerant.

One part nitrogen, three parts hydrogen.

Anhydrous means void of water content.

Anhydrous Ammonia (NH3):

Page 4: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Does not deplete the ozone.

Does not contribute to climate change.

Leaks are easily detectable.

Environmentally Friendly:

Page 5: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Properties: Ammonia has less volume than comparable

refrigerants. On large systems it requires smaller piping and smaller components.

EXAMPLE: Tons of refrigeration per 100 equivalent feet of pipe. R-134a: 11/8” copper = 28.4 tons liquid

2.3 tons suction R-717: 1” iron pipe = 126 tons liquid 3.8 tons suction

Page 6: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Ammonia and oil do not mix well, so keeping oil in the compressor is less difficult.

Ammonia is miscible with water, so it is easily diluted, and easily washed away.

Ammonia is corrosive to copper alloys

Page 7: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

How Does it Compare? R-12 Boils at –20 degrees at 0 lbs. R-134a Boils at –14 degrees at 0 lbs. R-717 Boils at –28 degrees at 0 lbs.

Ammonia is 3% more efficient than R-22 & 10% more efficient than R-134a

EXAMPLE: At 32 psig suction R-12 = 34 degrees R-134a = 37 degrees R-717 = 19 degrees

Page 8: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Safety: Ammonia is toxic and corrosive.

When mixed with oxygen it will burn.

Ammonia is lighter than air.

Ammonia can be easily diluted with water.

Small amounts of can be dispersed into a container of water.

Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) should always be used

when working with Ammonia.(i.e. neoprene gloves, eye goggles, full face shield, canister type respirator)

Page 9: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Equipment rooms must be well ventilated.

Egress should be well marked and unobstructed.

Make others aware that you are working on the equipment.

Equipment rooms must have a detection & alarm system.

Systems under 10,000 lbs. on site fall under the state and the EPA

Systems over 10,000 lbs. fall under Home Land Security. Every pound must be tracked and accounted for.

Page 10: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

The average odor threshold is 5 ppm.

100-200 ppm: Eyes irritated.

500 ppm & below: No permanent eye damage.

300 ppm: Immediate throat irritation.

1700 ppm: Coughing

2400 ppm: Threat to life after 30 minutes exposure.

5000 ppm: Vapor – Full body chemical suit required.

5000 ppm: Liquid – Second degree burns and blisters.

Page 11: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Check out some pictures of an ammonia refrigeration system!

Page 12: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Computer control panel on a 500 ton Frick screw machine

Page 13: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Labeled ammonia piping in the machine room

Page 14: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Ammonia piping in the machine room

Page 15: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Thermal siphon tank in the machine room

Page 16: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Liquid ammonia receiver tank

Page 17: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

500 ton Frick screw machine

Page 18: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

500 ton Frick screw machine

Page 19: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Ammonia accumulator

Page 20: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Torn down liquid ammonia pump

Page 21: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Ammonia transfer vessel and pump

Page 22: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Value station for an evaporator

Page 23: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Valve station for an evaporator

Page 24: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Evaporative condensers for ammonia plant

Page 25: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Main plant and valve station control center

Page 26: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

Three 500 ton Frick screw machines in plant

Page 27: Industrial Ammonia Refrigeration Systems

The End