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Home › Resources For You › Basic Components of the Home › Central Air Conditioning Systems

Central Air Conditioning Systems

Central Air Conditioner

All air conditioning systems reduce the temperature and adjust the humidity of the air in the home to levels that provide a degree of comfort.The most common type of system used in the USA is the basic, air-cooled, central air conditioning system. Another type of system, found primarily in hotter and arid areas like the southwestern USA, is known as an evaporator cooler or “swamp cooler”. Other, less common types include water-cooled, gas chillers and geothermal systems.

How They Work

The common, air-cooled central air conditioner removes heat from the air in the home and moves the heat to the air at the exterior. Air conditioners accomplish this by taking advantage of the basic physical law that heat moves to areas that are cooler. Heat from the interior of the home is transferred to a refrigerant that carries the heat to the exterior of the home. The most common refrigerant is freon, although it's makeup is continually being reworked due to it's ozone depleting nature.The warm air in the home is blown over an evaporator coil that contains cold (approximately 20 degrees F) freon liquid. The freon absorbs heat from the air in the house, which cools the air. The warmer (approximately 50 degrees F) freon, which has boiled and turned into a gas,  is then moved to the exterior of the home where it disperses the heat.

The question is, "How is the heat dispersed when it is hot outside?"  A gas or liquid, when compressed, will have a higher temperature.  A compressor is used to compress the freon gas, increasing its temperature by approximately 100 degrees F and causing the freon to become much hotter than the air outside. The air outside (approximately 85 degrees F) can then be blown over the condensing coil that contains the hot freon (approximately 150 degrees F) . The air absorbs the heat from the compressed freon, in effect cooling it. The cooled, but still compressed freon (approximately 100 degrees F), is then returned to the house. To lower the temperature of the freon liquid even more, the freon is expanded or decompressed (to approximately 20 degrees F). The freon is then once again ready to absorb the heat from the air in the home.

 

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