Freon in an a/c unit

When the refrigerant enters the evaporator, it is in a low-pressure gas form, where it evaporates plus absorbs heat from the air inside the building.

Being a hermit all winter season is getting stale, so today I am going to go to the beach for supper plus eat my salad in the sand. I’ll come back in an hour plus do my yoga session at property because I don’t like getting sand in my yoga mat. It is undoubtedly strenuous to remove sand from all of the crevices plus cracks in a sticky yoga mat. They are almost like English muffins with all of those nooks plus crannies, although I’m not sure what a nook or cranny is to be exact, and anyways, today is an air conditioner kind of day so my pal and I will enlighten you on how freon or refrigerant works in one of those systems; Freon is a refrigerant used in a/c (AC) systems to move heat from the inside of a building to the outside. It operates in a closed loop system, where it continuously circulates through the A/C unit, evaporating plus condensing to absorb plus release heat. When the refrigerant enters the evaporator, it is in a low-pressure gas form, where it evaporates plus absorbs heat from the air inside the building. The refrigerant then moves to the compressor, where it is compressed plus increases in temperature plus pressure. The hot, high-pressure gas then moves to the condenser, where it releases heat to the outside air plus condenses back into a high-pressure liquid. Finally, the refrigerant flows through the expansion valve, where its pressure plus temperature are reduced, causing it to once again evaporate plus start the process over. My great friend and I hope this helps you a bit.

 

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