MKimagin
Electrical
- Sep 14, 2005
- 49
hat might be trivial question.
I wonder why in air conditioning system, in most cases, it cool the colder air from inside the room, even thought the air conditioner (the heat pump) have the highest efficiency if the air feed ed in to it has as high as possible temperature, or the differential between the cold side and the hot side of heat pump is as close as possible.
Why do we not pull the hot air from out side, cool down and then push in to the room? It look like logical looking on the heat pump characteristic.
I try to analyze my room windows air conditioner characteristic, and I get to conclusion that the highest efficiency it achieve when you just start the unit, when the room is really hot. Once the room cool down the efficiency of that air conditioner significantly drop down.
I wonder why in air conditioning system, in most cases, it cool the colder air from inside the room, even thought the air conditioner (the heat pump) have the highest efficiency if the air feed ed in to it has as high as possible temperature, or the differential between the cold side and the hot side of heat pump is as close as possible.
Why do we not pull the hot air from out side, cool down and then push in to the room? It look like logical looking on the heat pump characteristic.
I try to analyze my room windows air conditioner characteristic, and I get to conclusion that the highest efficiency it achieve when you just start the unit, when the room is really hot. Once the room cool down the efficiency of that air conditioner significantly drop down.