homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Scientists develop AC that uses solid refrigerants and doesn’t hurt the environment

It could one day replace existing air conditioning that uses refrigerants that are thousands of times more powerful than CO2 at trapping heat.

Fermin Koop
August 23, 2022 @ 5:48 pm

share Share

Credit: Pixabay.

One of the big ironies of climate change is that as the temperature rises, the technology that people need to stay cool will make the climate hotter. Air conditioning (AC) units are expected to quadruple to 9.5 billion by 2050, accounting for as much as 0.5-degree Celsius rise in global temperatures by 2100. This means we need more sustainable air conditioning.

A team of US researchers has now created a prototype device that could one day replace existing ACs. It’s more environmentally friendly as it uses solid refrigerants to cool a space instead of hydrofluorocarbon gases, which are thousands of times more potent than carbon dioxide. The findings were presented at this week’s fall meeting of the American Chemical Society.

Current AC technology relies on industrial chemicals called hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), which absorb 150 to 5,000 times more of the sun’s energy than carbon dioxide. Chemist and material scientist Adam Slavney, one of the researchers behind the new prototype, says that simply installing a new AC or throwing one away “is a huge driver” of global warming.

Cooling without warming the planet

A prototype for a new AC system that uses solid refrigerants. Image credit: Slavney et al.

Cooling systems work by making a refrigerant to cycle between being a liquid and a gas. When the liquid becomes gas, it expands and absorbs heat, cooling a room. A compressor then turns the gas back into a liquid and released heat, which is directed outside the home. It seems an effective cycle — and in many ways it is — but the refrigerants used in these systems have always been a bane on the environment ever since they were invented.

A solution could be to use solid refrigerants, which, unlike gases, don’t leak into the environment. The researchers at Harvard University behind the new prototype found that barocaloric materials, a type of solid refrigerants, can be just as effective as traditional cooling systems. The AC uses pressure to go through the heat cycles, the pressure then drives a solid-to-solid phase change.

This means the material remains solid, but the internal molecular structure changes. Barocaloric solid materials are molecular chains that are typically disordered but under pressure become ordered and rigid, releasing heat. The process of going from an ordered to a relaxed structure is like melting wax but without it becoming a liquid, the researchers explained.

However, barocaloric systems also have their drawbacks. They require a lot of pressure to drive heat cycles. And to produce these pressures, specialized equipment is needed. But the researchers have now found that barocaloric materials can also act as refrigerants at much lower pressure. They built a cooling system from scratch and put these into practice.

The prototype has three main parts. A metal tube filled with the solid refrigerant and an inert liquid (water or oil), a hydraulic piston that applies pressure to the liquid, and the liquid that transfers that pressure to the refrigerant and carries heat through the system. While it still doesn’t use pressure as low as commercial AC systems, the researchers are hopeful they can get there.

“We’re really hoping to use this machine as a testbed to help us find even better materials,” said Slavney.

The team plans to test different barocaloric materials, including some that work at lower pressures and can carry heat better. They believe that solid refrigerants could eventually become a replacement for cooling technologies.

share Share

What Happens When You Throw a Paper Plane From Space? These Physicists Found Out

A simulated A4 paper plane takes a death dive from the ISS for science.

The Oldest Dog Breed's DNA Reveals How Humans Conquered the Arctic — and You’ve Probably Never Heard of It

Qimmeq dogs have pulled Inuit sleds for 1,000 years — now, they need help to survive.

A New Vaccine Could Stop One of the Deadliest Forms of Breast Cancer Before It Starts

A phase 1 trial hints at a new era in cancer prevention

After 700 Years Underwater Divers Recovered 80-Ton Blocks from the Long-Lost Lighthouse of Alexandria

Divered recover 22 colossal blocks from one of the ancient world's greatest marvels.

Scientists Discover 9,000 Miles of Ancient Riverbeds on Mars. The Red Planet May Have Been Wet for Millions of Years

A new look at Mars makes you wonder just how wet it really was.

This Is Why Human Faces Look So Different From Neanderthals

Your face stops growing in a way that neanderthals' never did.

Ozempic Is Changing More Than Waistlines as Scientists Wise Up to Concerning Side Effects

But GLP-1 drugs also offer many benefits beyond weight loss.

Researchers stop Parkinson's symptoms in mice using a copper supplement. Could humans be next?

Could we stop Parkinson's by feeding neurons copper?

There's a massive, ancient river system under Antarctica's ice sheet

This has big implications for our climate models.

I Don’t Know Who Needs to Hear This, But It's Okay to Drink Coffee in the Summer

Finally, some good news.