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Welcome to PolyScience’s Cool School. Here you will learn how to choose the product that best suits all of your cooling needs. Please take some time to read through the information. We hope it is informative and helps you to make the right choice for your company. |
Instant Fact Finder
What
is a Chiller
Chiller Types
Why Buy A Chiller
Chiller Designs
Chiller Applications
What is the Refrigeration Process
The
PolyScience Refrigeration System
Differences Between a Chiller and a Circulator
How to Choose a Chiller
How to Choose an Industrial Chiller
Sizing a Chiller for Plastics Processing
How to Choose a Laboratory Chiller
Calculating Process Heat Loads
Heat Rejection for Common Industry Machinery
Congratulations Graduate
The industrial chiller is a cooling system that removes heat from one element (water) and transfers it into another (ambient air or water).
A chiller is a compressor based cooling system that is similar to an air conditioner except it cools and controls the temperature of a liquid instead of air. The other main components to a chiller are a temperature controller, a recirculating pump and a reservoir. Operation and setup is simple. Fill the reservoir with fluid to be recirculated, typically water or an ethylene glycol/water mix. Install plumbing between the chiller and the application and provide power to the chiller. The controller regulates the chiller’s functions. The chiller will provide a stable temperature, flow and pressure once it has been programmed by a user for their individual needs. Harmful particles are kept out of the system by an internal strainer.
Portable chiller – A liquid cooling system on casters that can be relocated from one application to another with relative ease. It can be used to cool one or more heat generating devices.
Air-cooled chiller – These chillers absorb heat from process water and can be transferred to the surrounding air. Air-cooled chillers are generally used in applications where the additional heat they discharge is not a factor. They require less maintenance than water-cooled units and eliminate the need for a cooling tower and condense water pump. They generally consume approximately 10% more power than a water-cooled unit as a wet surface transfers heat better than a dry surface.
Water-cooled
chiller – These
chillers absorb heat from process water and transfer it to a separate water
source such as a cooling tower, river,
pond, etc. They are generally used for large capacity applications, where
the heat generated by an air-cooled chiller creates a problem. They are also
considered when a cooling tower is already in place, or where the customer
requires optimum efficiency of power consumption. Water- cooled chillers
require condenser water treatment to eliminate mineral buildup. Mineral deposits
create poor heat transfer situations, that reduce the efficiency of the unit.
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Selection
Process |
|
Water |
Air |
| 1. Adequate water supply available from tower or well source | 1. Adequate water supply not available from tower or well sources. |
| 2. Water supply is of good quality. | 2. Water supply is not of good quality. |
| 3. Heat recovery is not practical or unimportant. | 3. Heat recovery is practical and important. |
| 4. Plant ambient temperatures consistently exceed 95º F. | 4. Plant ambient temperatures will not consistently exceed 95º F. |
| 5. Ambient air is polluted with large dust and dirt particles. | 5. Ambient air is not polluted with large dust and dirt particles. |
Equipment Protection
The most compelling reason for a chiller is the protection it provides your
valuable processing equipment—such as spot welders, injection molding
equipment and other applications. A chiller commonly represents a small
fraction of the cost of the processing equipment, yet it provides solid
protection of your investment, 24-hours-a-day, 7-days-a-week for years
and years to come.
Increase Production
The speed and accuracy of production will increase as you maintain a constant
and proper cooling temperature in the equipment. A chiller will reduce
the number of rejected parts while increasing the number of parts produced
per hour.
One chiller cannot control every heat load. Some chillers are designed to cool to very low temperatures while others are designed for only mid-range applications. Some designs can support very high flow rates of fluid while other may be designed for just a trickle of fluid. The same issues apply with ambient temperatures. Some chillers use refrigerant suited for a high ambient temperature environment while other refrigerants are formulated for cooler conditions.
The customer must also consider the fluid being cooled. Distilled water or di-ionized water requires different conditions than tap water. DI and distilled water can cause the breakdown of metal they come in contact with. In cases like this the chiller is designed with no brass, copper or mild steel components that would come in contact with the water, instead, plastic or stainless steel are used. This eliminates the corrosive effects of the fluid.
Chillers are used in many industrial applications. The most common applications are:
Plastics
In the plastics industry chillers are used for cooling the hot plastic that
is injected, blown extruded or stamped. Chillers can also be used to cool
down the equipment used in the manufacturing process.
Laser
Chillers are used to cool down the lasers and the power supplies used to
power them.
Printing
Chillers remove the heat generated by the printing rollers and also cool
down the paper after it comes out of the ink drying ovens.
EDM
Chillers keep machinery at ambient temperature during the cutting process.
Machine Tooling
Chillers
cool the spindle of the machine as it produces the part and cools the liquid
being sprayed on part itself as it is being turned on the spindle.
MRI and PET Scans
Chillers
cool the high powered electronics inside the machines that are the latest
in diagnostic tools.
What is the Refrigeration Process?
Refrigeration is the removal and relocation of heat. So if something is to be refrigerated, it is to have heat removed from it. In order to refrigerate something, you must find a way to expose it to something that is colder than itself and nature will take over from there.
In order to understand the concept of refrigeration you must understand the concept of heat. Long ago a definitive method was developed to quantify heat. Heat is quantified by a measurement called a British Thermal Unit. When 1 LB of water is heated 1 degree Fahrenheit the amount of heat required for the process is called a British Thermal Unit. This is the standard measurement for heat in the refrigeration industry today. The BTU concept applies until a liquid reaches its boiling point. The boiling point of water is 212º. Something very important happens when water is at its boiling point. Once it reaches that point you could keep adding BTU’s, but the water would not get any hotter. It would change its state into a gas and it would take 970 BTU’s to vaporize that pound of water. This is called the Latent Heat of Evaporization and in the case of water it is 970 BTU’s per pound.
Why doesn’t the water boil when it is at room temperature? Surprisingly, it isn’t because the water isn’t hot enough at room temperature. The only thing that keeps the water from boiling is the pressure of the air molecules pressing down on the surface of the water. When you heat that surface to 212º and then continue to add heat, what you are doing is supplying sufficient energy to the water molecules to overcome the pressure of the air and allow them to escape from the liquid state. The atmospheric pressure of the environment, determines the amount of heat needed to vaporize the water. In outer space, where there is no air pressure, the water would vaporize into a gas in a flash. The lower the air pressure the lower the boiling point. If the water were placed under a bell jar and all the pressure removed, the water would boil at room temperature.
We can look at this from another point of view. When liquid evaporates it absorbs heat from the surrounding area. So finding a liquid that would evaporate at a lower temperature than water was one of the first steps needed for the development of mechanical refrigeration. Chemical engineers experimented for many years before finding the perfect chemicals for the job. A family of hydroflourocarbon refrigerants which have extremely low boiling points (below 0º F) were the answer.
There are four main components to a mechanical refrigeration system:
The PolyScience Refrigeration System

Differences Between a Chiller and a Circulator
Select a circulator when temperature stability is what’s desired, select a chiller when heat removal is what’s desired.
Circulator
Chiller
Chiller or Circulator – How to Choose
What is the Application?
Knowledge of the application may allow you to skip several steps
What is the Temperature Range?
<
30°C? Think refrigeration >30°C? Think Heating only
What Temperature Stability is Required?
±0.01°C? Think circulator ±0.5°C?
Think chiller
Closed Loop or Open Bath
Application?
If closed loop, think anything but immersion circulator
How Much Cooling Power
is Required?
Modest (100 – 700 watts) Strong (750 & up) Think circulator Think
chiller
What are the Pumping Requirements:
| Circulators | Chillers |
| Simplex – closed loop only | Magnetic Drive Centrifugal – fixed flow/ fixed pressure |
| Duplex – closed or open loop systems | Positive Displacement – fixed flow/adjustable pressure |
| Turbine – adjustable flow or pressure |
Other Requirements?
Remote probe
RS232 port
Expanded programming capabilities
Special fluids – watch compatibility and safety
Overall
Select circulators for temperature control and stability
Select chillers to provide best cooling power / heat removal
A Simple Quiz to see What You Have Learned
1. If you need a temperature range below 30°C, what applies?¨
Refrigeration
Heating only
Answer 1: Refrigeration
2. A Duplex Pump is required
for?¨
A Closed system¨
An Open system
Answer 2: Open System
3. You want to put several flasks in a tank and control them at 56°C. The combined flasks will occupy 20cm x 20cm. A digital display of temperature is needed. Stability needed is ±0.5°C. What do you need?
Answer 3: Immersion Circulator Model 7306 with a large Stainless Steel Open Bath or a large Acrylic Open Bath. Note the Immersion Circulator occupies 16.5cm x 12cm of the tank.
4. Your Laser company wants a model able to operate at 20°C, and needs to cool down a laser that requires a cooling capacity of up to 2500 watts of heat. You also requires a pressure rate of 25 psi.
Do you need?
A Circulator
A Chiller
Consider:
Desired temperature
is below 30°C
Desired cooling capacity is more than 750 watts
Desired pressure rate is more than 10 psi
Answer 4: Chiller
5. This is a Polymer Testing Application. You need a powerful heater and
a
reservoir capacity of 28 liters. The process will operate at a temperature
range of
130°C to 150°C. The process must circulate out to an open bath.
What model does he need?
Heating Circulator Model 812
Heating Circulator
Model 8102
Heating Circulator
Model 8202
Consider:
Desired reservoir capacity is 28 liters
Desired temperature range is above 30°C
Desired circulation to an external bath
Answer 5: Model 8102
6. You need to cool an Electrophoresis
apparatus, maintaining 20°C with
a
stability of ±0.3°C. The cooling requirement is 50W at 20°C.
You would also like
to read the temperature at a glance.
What model do you need?
Refrigerated Circulator
Model 912 Refrigerated Circulator
Model 9106 Refrigerated Circulator
Model 9112 Refrigerated Circulator
Consider:
Desired temperature is 20°C
Desired stability of ±0.3°C
Desired cooling capacity is 50 watts
Desired display
Answer 6: Model 9106
7. You need to cool an ICP, maintaining 20°C and a stability of ±0.5°C.
The cooling requirement is 2200 watts at 20°C. The application needs
7.5 lpm @
24 psi. You would also like to read the temperature at a glance.
What model do you need?
Recirculating Chiller Model 6106
Recirculating Chiller Model 6706P
Recirculating Chiller Model 6206
Consider
Desired temperature is 20°C
Desired stability is ±0.5°C
Desired Cooling of 2200 watts @ 20°C
Desired flow/pressure of 7.5 lpm @ 24 psi
Answer 7: Model 6706P
8. You want to control the temperature of Methanol at -35°C and put a beaker of sample into the bath every hour. The stability needed is ±0.1°C and there are no other special needs.
What do you need?
Refrigerated Circulator Model 9506
Refrigerated Circulator Model 9706
Refrigerated Circulator Model 9702
Consider:
Desired temperature is -35°C
Needed cooling is minimal
** Methanol is flammable and not a suitable fluid. The recommended low temperature/low
viscosity fluid is Dynalene supplied by PolyScience.
Answer 8: Model 9706
Chillers have many applications. To be sure that you have chosen the right chiller for your application we offer two selection methods, one for an industrial user and one for a laboratory user. If you have any questions that have not been answered, we are always available to guide you in your selection. Perhaps you have special needs that have to be addressed. Our Customer Service, Sales and Engineering teams are at your disposal to offer additional information or handle any customization issues you might have.
How To Choose An Industrial Chiller
Choosing the right size recirculating chiller adds to the economies of its use. The optimum size needed is based on the amount of heat your application is generating, plus additional power to maintain temperature under varying loads.
Normally the manufacturer of the equipment you are cooling will supply heat removal information, which will include BTU/hr or watts to be removed along with flow rate and desired and inlet and outlet temperatures for the equipment.
If information isn’t available, here’s how to calculate the heat load of your system:
BTU/hr = (T1-T2) x gpm x 60 min/hr x 8.33 lb/gal x Cp
T1 = temperature of coolant leaving the equipment, deg F
T2 = temperature of coolant entering the equipment, deg F
gpm = gallons per minute of coolant flowing through the equipment
Cp = specific heat of coolant; Water = 1.0
Measure temperature with the same thermometer if possible of with two thermometers of known accuracy. Measure gpm using a flowmeter of by collecting the coolant in a known volume for a given period of time.
Sizing A Chiller For Plastics Processing
Calculating Cooling Required
[(LB PER HOUR BEING PROCESSED) /MATERIAL FACTOR]*3519 = WATTS OF COOLING REQUIRED
EXAMPLE: Look at the list below and find the smallest material factor for the materials you are processing. If you are injection molding Nylon and ABS then choose the material factor for Nylon which is 40. If you are injection molding Nylon at a rate of 220 lb/hr, then:
(220/40)*3519 = 19355 Watts
Conversions
BTU/hr = Watts * 3.41
Tons = BTU/hr / 12000
Look at the cooling capacity chart for DuraChill and select the DCA750 or DCW750.
MATERIAL FACTORS FOR VARIOUS PROCESSES
INJECTION MOLDING
30 lbs/hour
HDPE
35 lbs/hour LDPE
35 lbs/hour Acrylic
35 lbs/hour Polyproplene
40 lbs/hour Nylon
40 lbs/hour Delrin
40 lbs/hour Urethane
45 lbs/hour PET
50 lbs/hour Polystyrene
50 lbs/hour ABS
50 lbs/hour Polycarbonate
50 lbs/hour Acetal
70 lbs/hour PVC
BLOW MOLDING
40 lbs/hour
HDPE
40 lbs/hour PET
40 lbs/hour PVC
SHEET CALENDERING EXTRUSION
35
lbs/hour PE
60 lbs/hour ABS
60 lbs/hour PS
PROFILE EXTRUSION
50 lbs/hour
HDPE
50 lbs/hour LDPE
50 lbs/hour PP
50 lbs/hour PET
60 lbs/hour ABS
60 lbs/hour PVC
VACUUM FORMING
70 lbs/hour
HDPE & LDPE
70 lbs/hour PP
200 lbs/hour PS
250 lbs/hour PVC
How To Choose A Laboratory Chiller
Choosing the right size
recirculating chiller adds to the economies of its use. The optimum size
needed is based on the amount of heat your
application
is generating, plus additional power to maintain temperature under
varying loads.
Normally the manufacturer of the device you are cooling will supply heat
removal information. If information isn’t available, here’s
how to calculate the heat load of your system:
Watts = [DT° x (K)] / S
Where:
Additional Considerations:
Conversions:
BTU’s
/ hr = (watts) * 3.413
Tons
= (BTU’s / hr) / 12,000
Calculating Process Heat Loads
Below are some basic methods for calculating the heat load of various industrial processes. In order to use the heat load calculations some general definitions need to be addressed. The calculations will reference the following basic definitions and formulas:
One Ton of Refrigeration = 12,000 Btu per Hour
One Refrigeration Ton = 3,025 kg calories per hour
Btu/hr for Water = GPM x 500 x Delta-T
Btu/hr for other fluids = Lbs. Per Hr. x Specific Heat x Specific Gravity
X Delta-T
Btu/hr for Solids = Lbs. Per hour x Specific Heat x Delta-T
Btu/hr = kW x 3,413
Btu/hr = HP x 2,544
PSIA = PSIG + 14.7
Btu/hr = kW x 1000 / .293
kW = Btu/hr / 1000 x .293
Lbs/Hr = GPM x Density x 8.022
Lbs/Hr = GPM x 501.375 x Specific Gravity
Specific Gravity = Density / 62.4
GPM of Water = Btu/hr / Specific Heat / Specific Gravity / Delta-T / 500
Heat Rejection for Common Industrial Machinery
Air Compressors ………………………1,500
Btu/hr per HP
Air Compressor Aftercooler…………..1,500 Btu/hr per
HP
Vacuum Pump Cooling………………..1,500 Btu/hr
per HP
Hydraulic Cooling………………………2,544
Btu/hr per HP x .6
Hot Runner……………………………..3,420
Btu/hr pr kW
Congratulations Graduate !
This
is to certify that___________________________
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