ASHRAE REFRIGERATION IP CH 15-2010 RETAIL FOOD STORE REFRIGERATION AND EQUIPMENT《零售食品店制冷设备》.pdf
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1、15.1CHAPTER 15RETAIL FOOD STORE REFRIGERATION AND EQUIPMENTDisplay Refrigerators. 15.1Refrigerated Storage Rooms 15.11Refrigeration Systems 15.12Condensing Methods 15.16Heat Recovery Strategies . 15.18Liquid Subcooling Strategies . 15.19Methods of Defrost. 15.19Supermarket Air-Conditioning Systems .
2、 15.20N the United States, almost 200,000 retail food stores operateI their refrigeration systems around the clock to ensure propermerchandising and safety of their food products. Figure 1 showsthat supermarkets and convenience stores make the largest contri-bution to this total (Food Marketing Inst
3、itute 2004). In U.S. retailfood stores, refrigeration consumes about 2.3% of the total electric-ity consumed by all commercial buildings (EIA 2003). As shown inFigure 2, refrigeration accounts for roughly 50% of the electricenergy consumption of a typical supermarket (Arthur D. Little1996). Supermar
4、kets and grocery stores have one of the highestelectric usage intensities in commercial buildings, at 43 kWh/ft2peryear. Use for larger supermarkets with long operating hours hasbeen measured at 70 kWh/ft2per year (Komor et al. 1998).The modern retail food store is a high-volume sales outlet withmax
5、imum inventory turnover. The Food Marketing Institute (2004)defines a supermarket as any full-line self-service grocery storewith an annual sales volume of at least $2 million (Food MarketingInstitute 2004). These stores typically occupy approximately50,000 ft2and offer a variety of meat, produce, a
6、nd groceries. A newcategory of supermarkets, called supercenters, incorporates asupermarket section and a general merchandise/dry goods section inone building. Almost half of retail food sales are of perishable orsemiperishable foods requiring refrigeration, including fresh meats,dairy products, per
7、ishable produce, frozen foods, ice cream and fro-zen desserts, and various specialty items such as bakery and deliproducts and prepared meals. These foods are displayed in highlyspecialized and flexible storage, handling, and display apparatus.Many supermarkets also incorporate food service operatio
8、ns thatprepare the food.These food products must be kept at safe temperatures duringtransportation, storage, and processing, as well as during display. Theback room of a food store is both a processing plant and a warehousedistribution point that includes specialized refrigerated rooms. Allrefrigera
9、tion-related areas must be coordinated during constructionplanning because of the interaction between the stores environmentand its refrigeration equipment. Chapter 2 of the 2007 ASHRAEHandbookHVAC Applications also covers the importance of coor-dination.Refrigeration equipment used in retail food s
10、tores may bebroadly grouped into display refrigerators, storage refrigerators,processing refrigerators, and mechanical refrigeration machines.Chapter 16 presents food service and general commercial refriger-ation equipment. Equipment may also be categorized by tempera-ture: medium-temperature refrig
11、eration equipment maintains anevaporator temperature between 0 and 40F and product tempera-tures above freezing; low-temperature refrigeration equipmentmaintains an evaporator temperature between 40 and 0F andproduct temperatures below freezing.DISPLAY REFRIGERATORSEach category of perishable food h
12、as its own physical characteris-tics, handling logistics, and display requirements that dictate special-ized display shapes and flexibility required for merchandising. Also,the same food product requires different display treatment in differentlocations, depending on local preferences, local income
13、level, storesize, sales volume, and local availability of food items by type. Dis-play refrigerators provide easy product access and viewing, and typ-ically include additional lighting to highlight the product for sale.Open display refrigerators for medium and low temperatures arewidely used in food
14、 markets. However, glass-door multideck mod-els have also gained popularity. Decks are shelves, pans, or racksthat support the displayed product.Medium- and low-temperature display refrigerator lineups ac-count for roughly 68 and 32%, respectively, of a typical supermar-kets total display refrigerat
15、ors (Figure 3). In addition, open verticalmeat, deli, and dairy refrigerators comprise about 46% of the totaldisplay refrigerators (Faramarzi 2000).Many operators combine single- and multideck models in mostdepartments where perishables are displayed and sold. Closed-service refrigerators are used t
16、o display unwrapped fresh meat,The preparation of this chapter is assigned to TC 10.7, Commercial Foodand Beverage Cooling, Display, and Storage.Fig. 1 Distribution of Stores in Retail Food SectorFig. 1 Distribution of Stores in Retail Food SectorFig. 2 Percentage of Electric Energy Consumption,by U
17、se Category, of a Typical Large SupermarketFig. 2 Percentage of Electric Energy Consumption, by Use Category, of Typical Large Supermarket15.2 2010 ASHRAE HandbookRefrigerationdelicatessen food, and, frequently, fish on crushed ice supplementedby mechanical refrigeration. A store employee assists th
18、e customerby obtaining product out of the service-type refrigerator. More com-plex layouts of display refrigerators have been developed as new orremodeled stores strive to be distinctive and more attractive. Refrig-erators are allocated in relation to expected sales volume in eachdepartment. Thus, f
19、loor space is allocated to provide balancedstocking of merchandise and smooth flow of traffic in relation toexpected peak volume periods.Small stores accommodate a wide variety of merchandise in lim-ited floor space. Thus, managers of these stores want to display morequantity and variety of merchand
20、ise in the available floor space. Theconcentration of large refrigeration loads in a small space makesyear-round space temperature and humidity control essential.Product TemperaturesDisplay refrigerators are designed to merchandise food to maxi-mum advantage while providing short-term storage. Prope
21、r mainte-nance of product temperature plays a critical role in food safety. Anestimated 24 to 81 million people annually become ill from micro-organisms in food, resulting in an estimated 10,000 needless deathsevery year. As a result, in 1995 the Food and Drug Administration(FDA) Food Code recommend
22、ed a lower storage temperature forcertain refrigerated food products for further prevention of food-borne diseases. The FDA 2001 Food Code requires that the coretemperature of meat, poultry, fish, dairy, deli, and cut produce notexceed 41F throughout packaging, shipping, receiving, loading,and stori
23、ng (FDA 2001).Proper maintenance of product temperature relies heavily on thetemperature of air discharged into the refrigerator. Table 1 lists dis-charge air temperatures in various display refrigerators, althoughcompliance with FDA requirements may require different refriger-ator air temperatures.
24、 Figure 4 depicts a relationship between dis-charge air, return air, and average product temperatures for an openvertical meat display refrigerator. These profiles were obtainedfrom controlled tests conducted over a 24 h period. Discharge andreturn air temperatures were measured at the air grille. A
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