Refrigerators
have become essential appliances in society for the preservation of food and
beverages. The quality of life for people has been greatly enhanced with the
availability of affordable refrigerators for homes. Most household
refrigerators utilize the vapor compression cycle with a circulating
refrigerant used to cool the refrigerator compartment. Household refrigerators
originally used an on/off controlled, constant-speed, single-phase induction
motor to drive the compressor. The poor efficiency of this approach made the refrigerator
one of the highest power consumption appliances in the home. In order to
improve the efficiency, modern refrigerators with the Energy star rating
utilize variable-speed, three-phase induction motor drives. Current models that
are Energy Star qualified use 50 percent less energy than the average models
made in 1974. The variable speed drive to the induction motor is provided using
the six IGBTs in the inverter stage. The author’s state: “The total energy
savings was about 40%. The system is very quiet and maintains a constant
temperature within 0.1 degree Celsius which improves the quality and shelf life
of food stored in the refrigerator.” Many companies have optimized IGBTs for
use in refrigerator compressor drives due to the large market opportunity. Some
companies have developed intelligent power modules, which combine the IGBTs,
fly-back rectifiers, and the drive circuits into a single module. This provides
a very compact and low cost motor drive option that can be easily adopted for
the manufacturing of refrigerators.
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