Cooling System Types For Inverter Enclosure; Inverter Placement - Mitsubishi Electric FR-B-750 to 75K Instruction Manual

Fr-b-750 to 75k (200v class), fr-b-750 to 110k (400v class)
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Installation of the inverter and enclosure
design
1.4.2

Cooling system types for inverter enclosure

From the enclosure that contains the inverter, the heat of the inverter and other equipment (transformers, lamps,
resistors, etc.) and the incoming heat such as direct sunlight must be dissipated to keep the in-enclosure temperature
lower than the permissible temperatures of the in-enclosure equipment including the inverter.
The cooling systems are classified as follows in terms of the cooling calculation method.
1) Cooling by natural heat dissipation from the enclosure surface (Totally enclosed type)
2) Cooling by heat sink (Aluminum fin, etc.)
3) Cooling by ventilation (Forced ventilation type, pipe ventilation type)
4) Cooling by heat exchanger or cooler (Heat pipe, cooler, etc.)
Cooling System
Natural ventilation
(Enclosed, open type)
Natural
cooling
Natural ventilation (Totally
enclosed type)
Heatsink cooling
Forced
Forced ventilation
cooling
Heat pipe
1.4.3

Inverter placement

(1) Installation of the Inverter
Installation on the enclosure
22K or less
10
Enclosure Structure
INV
INV
Heatsink
INV
INV
Heat
pipe
INV
30K or more
Comment
Low in cost and generally used, but the enclosure size
increases as the inverter capacity increases. For
relatively small capacities.
Being a totally enclosed type, the most appropriate for
hostile environment having dust, dirt, oil mist, etc. The
enclosure size increases depending on the inverter
capacity.
Having restrictions on the heatsink mounting position
and area, and designed for relative small capacities.
For general indoor installation. Appropriate for enclosure
downsizing and cost reduction, and often used.
Totally enclosed type for enclosure downsizing.
CAUTION
When encasing multiple inverters, install them in parallel as
a cooling measure. Install the inverter vertically.
* Refer to the clearances on the next page.
Vertical

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents