CO2 A/C !
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CO2 A/C !
So I just read in my local newspaper that near-future cars will use carbon dioxide as the refrigerant. It's supposed to be 25% better, plus if CO2 gas a Global Warming Potential of 1, then R134a is GWP 1400 or so. This being the case, I see no point in converting my Fiero to R134a, as the CO2 should be available by the time my car is running.
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the room temperature pressure of a CO2 cylinder for paintball is ~900 PSI. It's within a reasonable range for refrigerant use, but you'd need some brawny lines and a brawny pump to handle it, I think. Probably make for good refrigerant, though.
I think they also use liquified CO2 to leach caffeine from coffee beans, and to dry clean stuff when carbon tetrachloride went away.
I think they also use liquified CO2 to leach caffeine from coffee beans, and to dry clean stuff when carbon tetrachloride went away.
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I doubt they would be, however how safe is storing that for an extended period of time in an automobile? What happens in an accident, God forbid a bad accident? If the tank gets ruptured, it becomes a projectile, one with a lot of force.
Lastly, would the system still be essentially operable without maintenance? For example, would the CO2 lose its effectiveness, or can it be used over and over again like today's refrigerants? I guess what I'm asking is, will the bottle run out, or can you reuse the CO2 over and over again?
Lastly, would the system still be essentially operable without maintenance? For example, would the CO2 lose its effectiveness, or can it be used over and over again like today's refrigerants? I guess what I'm asking is, will the bottle run out, or can you reuse the CO2 over and over again?
88GT 3.4 DOHC Turbo
Gooch wrote:Way to go douche. You are like a one-man, fiero-destroying machine.
There's no bottle. It would be just like a normal AC system, but with CO2 as the refrigerant.
I think they would probably have to eliminate any rubber hoses, but from what I heard, the top tier auto makers are moving towards that anyway due to stricter refrigerant emissions laws.
While a room temp bottle of co2 is 800 psi, a room temp bottle of R134a is 80 psi. But they still need a safety margin for the high temps effect on vapor pressure. So if an ac compressor typically reaches 200+psi on the high side, it wouldn't surprise me to see 2000+psi on a CO2 system.
I think they would probably have to eliminate any rubber hoses, but from what I heard, the top tier auto makers are moving towards that anyway due to stricter refrigerant emissions laws.
While a room temp bottle of co2 is 800 psi, a room temp bottle of R134a is 80 psi. But they still need a safety margin for the high temps effect on vapor pressure. So if an ac compressor typically reaches 200+psi on the high side, it wouldn't surprise me to see 2000+psi on a CO2 system.
Last edited by whipped on Sun Jun 22, 2008 12:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
no it wouldn't become a projectile, it pops and peals open if its metal tank, and it cracks and leaks out very quickly and loudly if it s a carbon fiber tank. most likely they would use overrated tanks like scuba tanks that are good for up to 5000psi for safety sake.Aaron wrote:I doubt they would be, however how safe is storing that for an extended period of time in an automobile? What happens in an accident, God forbid a bad accident? If the tank gets ruptured, it becomes a projectile, one with a lot of force.
Lastly, would the system still be essentially operable without maintenance? For example, would the CO2 lose its effectiveness, or can it be used over and over again like today's refrigerants? I guess what I'm asking is, will the bottle run out, or can you reuse the CO2 over and over again?
phase changing CO2 from gas to liquid to gas again doesn't brake it down, it doesn't combine with anything in the system.
the high pressures required to liquify it and the risk of accidentally going to solid state (dry ice) inside the system are probably the reasons why i hasn't been done long before now.
with using CO2 you wouldn't need as big of lines as are used on the refrigerant systems because the energy released from the phase change of the CO2 is much greater (the energy to put it back to liquid is also greater) so a smaller volume of it is necessary for the same cooling effect.
smaller volume cn also mean a smaller a/c compressor. if they used the basic 8-900 room temperature pressure as the standard charge pressure then refilling could be handled with an upside down paintball tank to put liquid back into the system.
in fact asside from the high pressure belt drive compressor i could peice together a co2 based refrigerant system at home.
smaller volume cn also mean a smaller a/c compressor. if they used the basic 8-900 room temperature pressure as the standard charge pressure then refilling could be handled with an upside down paintball tank to put liquid back into the system.
in fact asside from the high pressure belt drive compressor i could peice together a co2 based refrigerant system at home.
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CO2 tanks are equipped with a burst valve because they are a high pressure, that would blow before the tank in any event. The tanks are built pretty ruggedly, I wouldn't worry about it being any kind of projectile or shrapnel. Best of all if it did rupture during an accident it would be like having an automatic fire suppression system.
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you wouldnt need a tank, and you could run a very small piston type electric compressor at the evaporator, therefore having very little refrigerant under pressure, and almost no tubing in the engine bay.
figure .5 tons of cooling to cool your car in the summer. this is 6000 btu or ~4 hp to run.
Not bad. Id give anything to get rid of the AC lines under the hood of my cars.
figure .5 tons of cooling to cool your car in the summer. this is 6000 btu or ~4 hp to run.
Not bad. Id give anything to get rid of the AC lines under the hood of my cars.
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Unless of course it's a hybrid and has a high voltage pack on board, then they get to do all sorts of fun stuff with electricity.The Dark Side of Will wrote:There's a reason current A/C systems have the compressor belt driven...
CO2 is a real PITA, it doesn't have much going for it unless you believe that you're doing the world some good by using it. Consider the greenhouse gasses created to make the parts that you'd use to retrofit, ship them, install them, etc. and then all of the sudden it seems kind of silly. If you're talking about a newly designed car that had it in mind from the get-go, then it makes a bit more sense, but even then it's a hard sell.
Bryce
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