Milling克斯 Evaporative Cooling Energy-Saving Air Conditioner Working Principle
The working principle involves a combination of water cooling, air cooling, evaporation cooling, and compressor technology. The external unit first cools the circulating water using the wet curtain evaporative condensation technique, reducing the water temperature to ambient. The cooled water then flows through the heat exchange system of the internal unit (at this point, the compressor is not in operation, as it has already compressed the refrigerant into a high-pressure, high-temperature gaseous state), removing most of the heat from the gaseous high-temperature refrigerant to form ambient-temperature liquid refrigerant. This liquid refrigerant is then throttled through a capillary tube to become a low-temperature, low-pressure liquid refrigerant, which is transported to the evaporator in the upper part of the internal unit for heat exchange with the indoor hot air, blowing out cold air. The circulating water that has been cooled for the high-pressure refrigerant is then pumped to the upper part of the external unit. Simultaneously, it is further cooled by the wind-cooled auxiliary and passes through the evaporative water curtain, converting the high-temperature water back into ambient temperature water. This water then flows through the internal unit again to cool the refrigerant under high-pressure conditions, thus completing the cycle. The energy recovery station operates in a continuous loop, as indicated by the following sequence: + to stand, stand, low energy, to, and.
Application Scope
Industrial Application Sites: Such as textiles,
Commercial Application Sites: Such as supermarkets,
Scope of use
Dyeing, Leather Manufacturing, Plastic Processing
Chemical industry,
Electronics, Printing, Packaging, Mechanical & Electrical
Apparel,
Mechanical, hardware, food, and factories with high-temperature heat sources.
Data centers, train stations, internet cafes, KTVs, dining rooms, bars, waiting halls, 4S car dealerships, gyms, hotpot restaurants, billiard halls, and other densely populated venues.






























