>>>Do you mean that I cannot regulate the power consumption and work load of the PSC motor and thus the compressor, even I vary the input frequency, current and voltage by using VFD?<<<
No. I mean that you _can_ control the speed of a PSC motor by varying the line frequency. I'm not so sure that you can do it to two differen PSC motors connected in parallel with one VFD. That's your first uncertainty. Your second uncertainty is that either of the motors may 'fall out of quadrature' as you drop the line frequency, and either stop, or fail to restart. Additionally, it does not follow that the refrigeration system will scale nicely with compressor speed. Because generic units typically use capillaries instead of expansion valves, it's probable that the high side pressure and temperature will just fall off as the speed comes down a little. As you drop the speed more, the oil distribution may be affected, or there may be other effects that were not anticipated in system design.
>>>Do you mean that PWM is used to regulate the torque of the motor, rather than regulate the work load and power consumption of the compressor?<<<
"Regulate" is the wrong word here. PWM on AC just steals part of every cycle, which reduces motor torque. It also introduces nonsinusoidal waveforms that may manifest as heat or acoustic noise. PSC motors typically do not respond in linear, or even usefully predictable, fashion, to PWM power.
>>>How does the digital scroll compressor save the energy? It seems to work in the way of PWM.<<<
I am aware that there is such a thing as a scroll compressor, and that its design is protected by patents and its manufacture is protected by secrecy.
I was not aware that there was such a thing as a variable capacity scroll compressor, or that it is or is not 'digital' in some way, as you alluded.
;----
Now, for the other reason why your idea won't make you rich:
It's already been done.
You can now buy an air conditioning sysem for your house that is otherwise conventional, but includes a variable speed air handler motor. It is actually a three phase AC motor, but it is fed from a special VFD that runs on single phase power and includes both an inverter and some means of measuring the motor current dynamically. ... from which it magically derives an estimate of the load on the motor. ... using which information it is able to both throttle the house airflow down to imperceptible but effective levels, and to tell you when the air filter needs changing.
The compressor is an ordinary high power PSC hermetic unit. The condenser fan motor is an ordinary low speed PSC unit. The compressor cycles on and off, only. There is no variable speed drive on the compressor.
Only the air handler motor is special, and maybe the thermostat, which now may include a filter change indicator.
What you can't buy is replacements for the damn magical energy saving air handler motors, is why I'm on my second such system in ten years. Well, belay that; I did get quotes on motors, which apparently can only be obtained by disassembling a complete air handler. It was easier, and not a whole lot more expensive, to just replace the entire system.
Yes, they do save energy, and lots of it.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA