Air conditioners remove heat from a specific area – your home’s interior. A refrigerant changes state from liquid to gas and back to liquid when it circulates between the indoor and outdoor components of your air conditioning system.
When the evaporator in the interior unit converts refrigerant to a gas, it absorbs heat. Heat is released as the gaseous refrigerant is squeezed back to liquid in the outside unit. The cycle is then repeated, and the heat is captured and released.
The primary function of evaporator coils is to transform the refrigerant from a liquid to a gaseous condition. The refrigerant must travel from the expansion valve to the evaporator coils in order to complete the operation. The refrigerant pressure drops as a result of the movement, and the expansion valve converts the liquid condition to a gaseous state.
The evaporator coils aid in the heat transfer process, resulting in the creation of a chilly surface. The blower on your air conditioner pushes the air and also makes cold conditioned air, lowering the temperature inside your home or other structure. The compressor of the gaseous refrigerant moves in the exterior unit of your air conditioner, as we explained earlier.
Condenser coils are found inside your air conditioner’s outside unit. It aids in the refrigerant process, which converts a gaseous state to a liquid condition. Because the compressor aids in increasing the gas pressure, the completion of this operation is entirely dependent on it. The pressure causes the gaseous state to transition back to liquid.