1. Introduction
Environmental Control Units (ECUs) have been commonly used by the military for space cooling inside shelters in hot climate regions. An ECU is a packaged air conditioner using a typical vapor compression cycle. The main components include a compressor, a condenser, an expansion valve, an evaporator, and a controller. The energy performance of the ECU, typically quantified by the Energy Efficiency Ratio (EER) or the Coefficient of Performance (COP) is evaluated based on the first law of thermodynamics. According to the first law of thermodynamics, energy cannot be created or destroyed. The second law of thermodynamics associates quality with energy and can be used to evaluate the degradation in the quality of energy during a process or a cycle. Therefore, compared to energy analysis, the exergy analysis can be used to detect the location of irreversibilities. The exergetic efficiency of an ECU is a result of the destruction of available energy (or exergy) generated by the individual system’s parts. Therefore, a combined first- and second-law analysis directly identifies the components with the potential to improve the efficiency of the ECU. Second-law analyses can be categorized into irreversibility and exergy (or availability) analyses. The former discusses the entropy generation with irreversibility, while the latter addresses the conversion and loss of exergy.
In recent studies, second-law analyses have increasingly been applied to a variety of heating, ventilating, and air conditioning (HVAC) applications. Bejan [
1] developed an analytical method to conduct second law analyses for thermal systems; whereas Cengel and Boles [
2], Moran et al. [
3], Dincer and Rosen [
4] drafted the second-law analysis for HVAC applications. Fartaj et al. [
5], Xu et al. [
6] studied super-critical CO
cycle using second-law analysis. Meunier et al. [
7], Şencan et al. [
8] utilized the second-law analysis to absorption and adsorption refrigeration systems. Kilicarslan and Hosoz [
9], Gill and Singh [
10] applied second-law analysis to a cascade refrigeration system using various refrigerant pairs, namely R-152a/R-23, R-290/R-23, R-507/R-23, R-234a/R-23, R-717/R-23, R-404a/R-23, and R-134a/LPG; whereas Arora and Kaushik [
11], Oruç and Devecioğlu [
12], Yataganbaba et al. [
13] examined alternative refrigerants such as R-502, R-404A, R-507A, R-417A, R-424A, R-1234yf, and R-1234ze to replace refrigerants harmful to the environment (i.e., R-22 and R-134a) using exergy analysis. Similarly, Mota-Babiloni et al. [
14], Babarinde et al. [
15], Gill et al. [
16], Modi et al. [
17], de Paula et al. [
18] utilized the exergy analysis in vapor compression refrigeration systems using alternatives R-143m, R-1234yf, R-161, R-450A, R-513A, R-1270, R-290, R-600a, and R-744 to replace R-134a.
As for vapor compression refrigeration systems, Ahamed et al. [
19] reviewed studies on exergy analysis for vapor compression refrigeration systems and found that irreversibilities can be reduced by condenser subcooling of up to 5 °C and reducing the temperature difference between the external fluid temperatures and the evaporating and condensing temperatures. They showed that the significant portion of irreversibilities was intrinsic to the compressor that could be reduced by maintaining compressor discharge and suction temperatures within 65 °C and 14 °C, respectively. Bridges et al. [
20] performed a second-law analysis to evaluate the irreversibilities associated with the system’s parts in an R-134a household refrigerator with a volume of 0.51 m
(18 ft
) and a split-system R-410A air conditioner with a capacity of 3 tons of refrigeration (RT). They identified the potential in the individual system’s part to enhance the overall exergetic efficiency. The results declared that the proportion of irreversibilities inherent to the refrigerator’s components conformed the sequence; compressor, condenser, and then evaporator; whereas, for the air conditioner unit, the evaporator ranked first, then the condenser and the compressor. Likewise, Yumrutaş et al. [
21] numerically studied the effects of evaporating and condensing temperatures using exergy analysis on the performance of a vapor compression refrigeration cycle with a cooling load of 1 kW using refrigerant R-717. They showed significant degradation in exergy, and an increase in the component’s irreversibility as the temperature lift increased. The exergy loss was estimated to be around 50% in the compressor when operating at a condensing temperature of 30 °C and a evaporating temperature of
°C. Kabul et al. [
22] investigated the irreversibility of using hydrocarbons (i.e., R-600a) in a case study of 1 kW refrigeration system with an internal heat exchanger. The results showed that the compressor had the highest irreversibility rate of 46.41%, while the internal heat exchanger had the lowest of 2.29% relative to the overall irreversibility. Lee [
23] applied exergy analysis to data sets obtained from a modified water-cooled screw-chiller with a cooling capacity of 100-RT using refrigerant R-22. The analytical results showed that the irreversibility percentages associated with the components followed the order; compressor 38% to 47%, followed by condenser 22% to 27%, and then evaporator 17% to 23%. Byrne and Ghoubali [
24] numerically utilized exergy analysis for an air-source heat pump system with R-407C and R-290 for simultaneously heating and cooling. The analysis was averaged for outlet cold source/outlet hot source temperatures: 7/25 °C, 7/35 °C, and 7/45 °C. The results showed that the exergy destruction occurred mainly in the compressor by approximately 55% due to the high heat losses. In addition, maximizing the area of the heat exchangers would minimize the exergy destruction, but further exergo-economic analysis was required to optimize for the cost. Furthermore, Voloshchuk et al. [
25] found that for an R-134a air-source heat pump system, the maximum exergy destruction is associated with the evaporator by 63% due to its thermodynamics inefficiency (i.e., high pressure drops or high temperature differences).
The literature review above shows that the application of a second-law analysis of a military Environmental Control Unit (ECU) under extremely high ambient conditions (e.g., 51.7 °C (125 °F) or higher) is still lacking. Therefore, this study aims to develop a methodology to assess the irreversibilities within the components of an ECU using a second-law analysis, and to distinguish the potential contribution in each system’s component relative to the overall exergetic efficiency when operating at high ambient temperature conditions of outdoor temperature condition of 51.7 °C (125 °F) and indoor temperature condition of 32.2 °C (90 °F) with a relative humidity of 50%. Three ECUs, 1.5 (5.3 kW), 3 (10.6 kW), and 5 (17.6 kW) tons of refrigeration (RT), are tested at a high ambient condition to confirm the model developed herein. The ECUs are packaged air conditioners that have a scroll type compressor, a micro-channel type condenser, a thermostatic expansion valve, and a fin-and-tube type evaporator. The 1.5-RT and 5-RT ECUs have hot-gas by-pass circuits and use R-407C as the refrigerant, while the 3-RT ECU uses R-410A. Comparisons were made to yield a clear decision on how to enhance the system exergetic efficiency of the ECU. To be noted that this paper is an extension of Bahman and Groll [
26]. The main contribution of this work includes, but not limited to, literature review, experimental analysis and verification, uncertainty analysis, and parametric analysis.