Refrigeration and Heat Pump Simulation Software

Refrigeration and heat pump projects must deliver the required cooling capacity or heating output with the highest possible efficiency while operating reliably under real-world boundary conditions. This requires not only the right process concept, but also effective integration with heat sources, heat sinks, and adjacent processes. In many applications, the greatest improvements in performance come from careful system integration, including the matching of temperature levels, the minimization of temperature differences in heat exchangers, and the optimization of operating strategies across seasonal and load variations.
SimTech’s Integrated Process Simulation Environment, IPSE, enables engineers to build accurate heat and mass balance models, evaluate plant performance, analyze off-design characteristics, and compare design options. From conceptual design and detailed engineering to commissioning and the optimization of operating parameters, IPSE supports the full lifecycle of refrigeration and heat pump projects with a flexible and reliable modelling approach. Thanks to its unified framework, these capabilities are available both in the desktop software IPSEpro or the web-based service IPSE GO.
How Refrigeration Processes and Heat Pumps are Modeled Using IPSE
Models in IPSE are based on the concept of individual components, where you assemble models graphically from icons representing components like compressors, heat exchangers, etc. The advantage of this approach is that you are not limited by predefined process configurations.It allows you to model and analyse refrigeration and heat pump systems based on both vapor compression and absorption processes. It allows you to model and analyse refrigeration and heat pump systems based on both vapor compression and absorption processes. Below you see a small selection of plant models that have been created using IPSE.
Vapor Compression System

Model of a vapor compression cooling system
Absorption Chiller

Absorption System
System with Steam Ejector

Vapor Compression System with Steam Ejector
Vapor compression processes
A vapor compression process (vapor-compression refrigeration / heat pump cycle) is the dominant industrial method for producing cooling (refrigeration/chillers) or useful heat (heat pumps). It works by circulating a refrigerant in a closed loop and forcing heat to flow “uphill” in temperature by using mechanical work (usually from an electric motor driving a compressor).
Absorption refrigeration processes
An absorption refrigeration process produces cooling without a mechanical compressor. Instead, it uses thermal energy (steam, hot water, waste heat, or a burner) to provide the equivalent of compression: refrigerant vapor is absorbed into an absorbent at low pressure, the resulting solution is pumped to a higher pressure, and the refrigerant is then desorbed (separated) in a generator using heat. The working medium is a pair of substances (refrigerant + absorbent). Two common pairs are:
- Water / Lithium Bromide (H₂O/LiBr): water is the refrigerant, LiBr is the absorbent.
- Ammonia / Water (NH₃/H₂O): ammonia is the refrigerant, water is the absorbent.
Performance evaluation of heat pumps, refrigeration and cooling systems
IPSE supports the modelling and performance evaluation of a wide range of refrigeration and heat pump configurations, including:
- Industrial refrigeration (food and beverage, cold storage, process cooling)
- District heating and large heat pumps (waste heat recovery, sewage water, geothermal, ambient sources)
- Chillers and cooling plants (building services, data centers)
- Cascade systems and multi-stage compression
- Heat recovery and combined heating/cooling systems (simultaneous heating and cooling demand)
- Heat and mass balance software for refrigeration cycles
A reliable heat and mass balance model (also referred to as a mass and energy balance) is a key factor for successful refrigeration and heat pump projects. In early project phases, engineers need to confirm feasibility: target temperatures, required capacity, achievable COP/EER, compressor operating limits, and heat exchanger duties. During detailed design and operation, models are used to:
- Predict COP / EER and energy consumption under varying boundary conditions
- Evaluate part-load performance and control strategies
- Size and validate compressors, heat exchangers, evaporators, condensers, and auxiliary equipment
- Identify pinch points and integration opportunities with other processes
- Compare alternative layouts and quantify the benefit of heat recovery and process coupling
IPSE for refrigeration and heat pump modelling
IPSE models provide valuable information for selecting and designing efficient refrigeration and heat pump processes. With its flexible, equation-based approach, IPSEpro enables users to create consistent cycle performance models and plant-wide energy balances—from the refrigeration loop itself to the surrounding heat source and heat sink systems. This supports engineering decisions from concept development through commissioning and optimization, helping teams reduce energy use, improve integration with adjacent processes, and achieve robust performance over the full operating range.