5 years
A fluid will move from high pressure to low pressure.
High water pressure.
NO, high pressure is where there is a lot of pressure on something high tempurature is when some thing is hot.
Many refrigerants cause damage to the ozone layer. These are CFC's.
High pressure liquid
5 years
The difference would be due to the different refrigerants used by each which is not given. Also the refrigerator will have a more constant condenser pressure because it is within an environment where the ambient temperature varies little.END
You need to specify what kind of system. Automotive AC systems and home AC systems use different refrigerants. That, along with the temperature/pressure relationship and ambient air temperature, all factor into what your high pressure (and, consequentially, low pressure) side should read on your manifold pressure gauge.
Inorganic refrigerants are refrigerants that are not organic
Jun-Young Choi has written: 'A generalized pressure drop correlation for evaporation and condensation of alternative refrigerants in smooth and micro-fin tubes' -- subject(s): Refrigerants, Thermomechanical properties
It depends on the ambient condensing temperature. A pressure temperature comparison chart for 134Aa can be found at http://www.csgnetwork.com/r134apresstempconv.html Different refrigerants condensence and evaporate at different temps/pressure
HFC refrigerants
A refrigerator is basically an air conditioning system. There is a high (discharge) and a low (vacuum) side to such systems. As it goes through the system, the refrigerant will change state (e.g., high pressure vapor to high pressure liquid, high pressure liquid to low pressure liquid, low pressure liquid to low pressure vapor, low pressure vapor back to high pressure vapor). This facilitates the absorption of heat from the refrigerator compartment and the exchange of that heat to the ambient air. What you're seeing there are the pressure readings (in psig) of the high pressure and low pressure sides of that system. Your refrigerator and an automotive AC system use different refrigerants, and thus have different system operating temperatures. While those numbers would be excessively high on an automotive system, I don't know if that's the case with a refrigerator. You'd need to inquire with a qualified service professional on the matter of what your refrigerator's operating pressures should be.
A high pressure systems has a high pressure center.
A fluid will move from high pressure to low pressure.
Refrigerants remove heat in a refrigerator by changing phases within the coils. They will absorb or release heat through evaporation or condensation. The compressor and expansion valve facilitate the pressure changes. For more information and a diagram, please refer to the related link.