Industrial heat recovery by absorption/compression heat pump using TFE-H2O-TEGDME working mixture

Abstract The thermodynamic performance of a single-stage absorption/compression heat pump using the ternary working fluid Trifluoroethanol–Water–Tetraethylenglycol dimethylether (TFE–H2O–TEGDME) for upgrading waste heat has been studied. A simulation program has been developed using a mathematical model based on mass and energy balances in all components of the cycle and thermodynamic equilibrium considerations. In order to establish the optimum operating conditions of the cycle for various thermal conditions, sensitivity studies of the coefficient of performance (COP), the flow rate of the weak solution and the compressor volumetric displacement, both per unit of upgraded energy, were carried out versus of water content in the vapour phase. The results obtained show that the operation of the cycle with this ternary system is still more advantageous than the TFE–TEGDME binary working pair. So, it is possible to upgrade thermal waste heat from 80 to 120°C, with a COP of about 6.4, with a compression pressure ratio of 4 at a low pressure of 100 kPa, the water mole fraction in the vapour being 42%. At these operating conditions, the necessary weak solution mass flow rate is about three times lower than the corresponding binary one. The performance comparison of such a cycle with other absorption cycles like the heat transformer or the single-effect heat pump, both of them using the ternary system, shows its interest and potential.