Frost Suppression and Enhancement of an Air-Source Heat Pump via an Electrostatically Sprayed Superhydrophobic Heat Exchanger

  • Sicheng Fan
  • , Zhengyu Duan
  • , Zhaoqing Ke
  • , Donghua Zou*
  • , Zhiping Yuan*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Frost accumulation on heat exchangers severely limits the efficiency and reliability of air-source heat pumps (ASHPs) in cold, humid environments. Superhydrophobic coatings fabricated via electrostatic spraying offer a promising energy-free strategy for frost suppression. In this study, a robust superhydrophobic coating was deposited on the heat exchanger of a residential ASHP using this scalable technique. Under low-temperature heating conditions (2/1 °C), the coated exchanger delayed frost completion by a factor of 2.83 and shortened defrosting time by 33.3% compared to a conventional hydrophilic counterpart. These improvements translated to a 6.24% increase in average heating capacity and a 2.83% gain in the coefficient of performance (COP). Although the thicker superhydrophobic coating resulted in a marginal 3.1% reduction in cooling capacity during free-cooling operation, the significant enhancements in frost resistance and heating performance underscore its practical value. This work demonstrates that electrostatic spraying is a viable and effective method for fabricating high-performance superhydrophobic heat exchangers, paving the way for more efficient and frost-resistant ASHPs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number342
JournalEnergies
Volume19
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2026
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • air-source heat pumps (ASHPs)
  • coefficient of performance (COP)
  • electrostatic spraying
  • frost suppression
  • heat exchanger
  • heating capacity
  • low-temperature environments
  • superhydrophobic coating

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