In general, refrigeration oil of good solubility with refrigerant is used in refrigeration compressors, and development of a concentration sensor of refrigerant dissolved in the oil is needed. In this study, oil and refrigerant concentrations are measured with newly developed capacitance sensor which measure the change of dielectric constant with the concentration. It is found that in most cases of oil-refrigerant combinations the dielectric constant of refrigerant is two to three times as large as that of refrigeration oil and the dielectric constant of mixtures increases linearly with the concentration of refrigerant. When measuring the refrigerant concentration of R410A, t he measurement of the concentration by the dielectric constant is also feasible as long as the composition of each refrigerant component dissolved in the oil does not change from the nominal composition. Prototypes of small sensors, such as a cylindrical type and a needle type, are developed and the performance of the needle sensor with shield is preferable. A correlation for a given oil-refrigerant mixture obtained by a large capacitance sensor is applicable for the small sensors after correcting for stray capacitance. Flow of fluid in the sensors does not affect the capacitance measured by the sensors, while bubbles due to foaming do affect the measurement.
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