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Case study of the transcritical CO2 system in the National Speed Skating Oval

journal contribution
posted on 2025-11-14, 02:24 authored by Jiajia Guan, Yiyou Qiao, Ce Cui, Bin Wang, Xiang Yin, Feng Cao, Xiaolin WangXiaolin Wang
Due to the influence of economic and policy factors, the requirements for the reliability and energy-saving of large-scale industrial CO2 refrigeration systems are much higher than those of small and medium-sized systems. This study collected and analyzed the data of the transcritical/subcritical CO2 ice-making system of NSSO. Different from the research on large-scale ice-making systems that mostly rely on theoretical models and focus on performance simulation, this study conducts multidimensional analyses based on actual operation data. First, system operation characteristics and steady-state performance were evaluated, along with heat recovery performance and energy consumption. Additionally, ice surface temperature data were collected to assess ice quality. Finally, a comprehensive exergy loss analysis was conducted to identify major sources of irreversible losses, providing insights for energy-saving optimizations in large-scale refrigeration systems. Results indicate that the system exhibits stable startup behavior, achieving operational stability within 8 to 10 min. Heat recovery contributes to approximately 40 % electricity savings compared to PTC heating. Moreover, ice surface temperature fluctuations are effectively controlled, with a maximum coefficient of variation of only 5.01 %. Exergy analysis shows that the heat exchanger at high-pressure side, compressor, and ejector account for more than 80 % of the total exergy loss. The transcritical CO2 refrigeration system demonstrates substantial energy-saving and environmental benefits, making it a promising solution for artificial ice-making applications.

History

Sub-type

  • Article

Publication title

Applied Thermal Engineering

Volume

279

Article number

127971

Pagination

127971

ISSN

1359-4311

Department/School

Engineering

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication status

  • Published

Rights statement

© 2025 Published by Elsevier Ltd

UN Sustainable Development Goals

7 Affordable and Clean Energy

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