Refrigeration & Air Conditioning

Mon-Fri: 09:00 - 17:30

24h Emergency Service

How a refrigerator works

This is what’s going on inside your icebox at this very moment! The left-hand side of the image demonstrates what’s going on inside the chiller bureau (where you keep your sustenance). The specked line and pink region demonstrate the back divider and protection isolating within all things considered. The right-hand side of the image demonstrates what’s going around the back of the refrigerator, far out.

The coolant is a pressurized fluid as it enters the development valve (yellow). As it goes through, the unexpected drop in weight influences it to extend, cool, and transform halfway into a gas (simply like a fluid vaporized transforms into a cool gas when you shower it out of a can onto your hand).

As the coolant streams around the chiller bureau (more often than not around a pipe covered in the back divider), it bubbles and transforms totally into a gas, thus retains and expels heat from the sustenance inside.

The blower crushes the coolant, raising its temperature and weight. It’s currently a hot, high-weight gas.

The coolant moves through slim radiator pipes on the back of the ice chest, giving out its warmth and cooling once again into a fluid as it does as such.

The coolant streams back through the protected bureau to the extension valve and the cycle rehashes itself. So heat is always gotten from inside the icebox and put down again outside it.

Comments are closed.