Skip to main content

Home/ Clean Energy Transition/ Group items tagged refrigerators

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Colin Bennett

Variable Speed Control Reduces Energy Consumption In Refrigeration Applications - 0 views

  • As shown through theory and case study, speed control of refrigeration components provides maximum flexibility, control and energy efficiency
  • There are several incentives for using speed control on screw compressors: - Drive control will reduce the power penalty associated with slide valve, poppet valve, or throttling capacity control. On compressors with no capacity control, speed control will eliminate other poor control strategies. - Drive control will reduce wear and tear associated with slide valve action. - Drive control allows a precise suction pressure to be maintained. With slide valve, a broad dead band is often maintained to avoid excessive wear. - Drive speed control provides compressor size reduction with the same system capacity demand.
Sergio Ferreira

Magnetic Refrigerator Needs No Electricity | Got2BeGreen - 0 views

  • Scientists at the Technical University of Denmark created a refrigerator that uses magnets to cool instead of electricity by finding a cooling method which uses magnetic materials instead of electricity.
  •  
    Cooling without electricity. Maybe a reality... in 10 years...
Jeff Johnson

Chemists Break Down Pesky Greenhouse Gas (Wired.com) - 0 views

  •  
    The molecules, known as fluorocarbons, are found in plastics, clothing and refrigerants. At their heart is a union of carbon and fluorine -- a union that, thanks to their atomic configurations, is one of the strongest molecular unions known in nature. Under standard conditions, fluorocarbons are impervious to acids and bases. They don't give or receive electrons, the very currency of molecular reconfiguration. Breaking them down is possible only at temperatures approaching 2000 degrees Fahrenheit. In some situations, that stability is a blessing: Teflon is made from fluorocarbons. But so are the hydrofluorocarbon coolants in refrigerators and air conditioners -- and when released, those become greenhouse gases that can circulate for thousands of years.
Hans De Keulenaer

Do Energy-Efficient Appliances Really Save You Money? | Zillow Blog - 2 views

  •  
    You've purchased a new energy-efficient washing machine and refrigerator. So, will your utility bill reflect a huge savings?The easy answer is: It depends. It depends on the size and age of the appliance you're replacing, as well as your definiti...
Colin Bennett

Report: Lighting the way to greener retail | Greenbang - 0 views

  •  
    Replacing environmentally unfriendly fluorescent tubes with digital lighting in refrigerated display equipment drastically lowers energy consumption
Colin Bennett

The first magnetic refrigerator from Denmark! | The Green Optimistic - 0 views

  •  
    A group of researchers at the Technical University of Denmark's project laboratory in Risø have discovered a cooling method that uses magnetic materials instead of electricity, reported daily free newspaper Nyhedsavisen.
Phil Slade

Camfridge Ltd: the future of refrigeration - 2 views

shared by Phil Slade on 17 Jan 10 - Cached
  •  
    Energy efficienct, gas-free refrigeration and cooling technology.
Colin Bennett

Water-to-water Heat Pumps to the Rescue? - 0 views

  •  
    By Jorge Moreno, Environmental and Building Technologies, Frost & Sullivan With more end users focusing on reducing energy costs, energy-saving water-to-water heat pump (WTWHP) chillers are being deployed to reduce a facility's utility bills. A WTWHP chiller is a water-cooled chiller that is designed to produce hot water at a specified temperature. The use of a WTWHP chiller is very similar to a conventional centrifugal chiller except for the fact that it uses two compressors, slightly different piping configurations, and more advanced controls in order to balance cooling and heating loads. In a conventional chiller, cold water is produced for comfort cooling, and the hot water that is extracted from the refrigeration process goes into a cooling tower and is released into the atmosphere. In a WTWHP chiller, this hot water is captured and relocated to a second heating stage, where the temperature is raised and the water is used as a heating source for a building's heating requirements. The key strength of WTWHP chillers is the high coefficient of performance (COP) that translates into significant energy savings and a shorter payback period. On the other hand, the key weakness is that it can only provide such benefits in a narrow range of applications primarily due to its coincident need for cooling and heating requirements throughout the year to ensure efficiency. A coincident need means that the application demands sizable water heating load along with the typical high cooling requirements in summer, and a sizable chilled water load along with the typical heating requirements during winter. Cooling output is directly dependent on the demand for heating, and vice versa. Consequently, in the absence of sufficient heating requirements, there is only a limited amount of cooling that can be produced. Any excess heating or cooling cannot be stored and hence, it is critical to align the cooling with the expected heating requirements. Coincidentally, in the absence of suf
Gary Edwards

Miniature Nuclear Plants Seek Approval to Work in U.S (Update1) - BusinessWeek - 2 views

  •  
    Manufacturers of refrigerator-sized nuclear reactors will seek approval from U.S. authorities within a year to help supply the world's growing electricity demand. John Deal, chief executive officer of Hyperion Power Generation Inc., intends to apply for a license "within a year" for plants that would power a small factory or town too remote for traditional utility grid connections. The Santa Fe, New Mexico-based company and Japan's Toshiba Corp. are vying for a head start over reactor makers General Electric Co. and Areva SA in downsizing nuclear technology and aim to submit license applications in the next year to U.S. regulators. They're seeking to tap a market that has generated about $135 billion in pending orders for large nuclear plants.
Hans De Keulenaer

NREL Helps Cut Building Energy Use 50% - CleanTechnica - 1 views

  • The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Commercial Buildings Program and DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) are working with the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) and the buildings industry (see sidebar) to find ways to reduce the energy intensity of large hospitals, schools, and retail buildings by 50%.
Hans De Keulenaer

Scientists Fabricate Room Temperature Superconducting Material - 0 views

  • A new breakthrough superconducting material fabricated by a Canadian-German team has been made out of a silicon-hydrogen compound and does not require cooling. The implications of the discovery are enormous and could transform the way people live by cutting power usage from everything from refrigeration to cell phones.
Colin Bennett

Solar-Powered Fridges - Emily Cummins Develops Portable Cooler for Developing Countries... - 0 views

  •  
    21-year-old student Emily Cummins has created a portable solar-powered fridge specifically for use in developing countries.
Sergio Ferreira

Three more EuP studies advise on efficiency - 0 views

  • There is significant potential to improve the energy efficiency of commercial refrigerators, boilers and water heaters, according to the latest three studies carried out under the EU's energy-using products (EuP) directive.
  • Two of these – on imaging equipment and electric motors – are expected this month.
Colin Bennett

Hyperefficient Transportation: Utility Bikes and Bike Trailers : MetaEfficient - 0 views

  • Utility bikes or “work bikes” are very efficient vehicles for transporting cargo (and children too). They are quite popular in bike-friendly places like Amsterdam, Copenhagen and China. Bikes can tow a remarkable amount of weight. Loads in excess of 880 pounds (400 kilograms) have been hauled behind bikes along flat surfaces. Generally though, 300 pounds (140 kilograms) is considered the upper threshold for hauling. Full-sized refrigerators or couches that won’t fit in a car can comfortably be pulled behind a bicycle with the right kind of trailer.
Hans De Keulenaer

Shocking electricity prices follow deregulation | Feet to the Fire - 0 views

  • You really can’t equate electricity with an airline trip or a telephone. You don’t have to take that trip. Or not use the phone. We use electricity thoughout our day. Washing our clothes, refrigerating our food, computers, etc. It is pervasive. Some economists say electricity isn't suited to competition because it's needed 24 hours a day and can't be stored, giving sellers too much leverage.
Hans De Keulenaer

As China's Rare Earth R&D Becomes Ever More Rarefied, Others Tremble -- Stone 325 (5946... - 0 views

  • China was late to join the race to develop novel rare earth materials, elements that are essential constituents of everything from iPods to Patriot missiles. But Western observers agree that China is catching up fast in areas such as fuel cells and magnetic refrigeration. Today, about three-quarters of the world's neodymium magnets are made in China. Domestic industrial demand is rising: Last year, China consumed 60% of all processed rare earths. That unnerves some industry analysts and U.S. legislators, who have expressed concern about China's dominance of the rare earth supply. Last year, China satisfied 95% of global demand—now about 125,000 tons per year—and holds more than half of all proven reserves. In 2005, prices started creeping up when China began to limit production and slap export tariffs on some rare earths. In a policy paper last month, China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology floated the idea of prohibiting export of three scarcer rare earths: europium, terbium, and dysprosium. If the Chinese government were to implement such a policy, it would be a big problem for other countries.
Colin Bennett

Heat Recovery - Energy Solutions - 0 views

  •  
    * Micro-channel aluminium condensers, that reduce refrigerant charge while increasing the effectiveness of heat exchange;
Colin Bennett

Household Energy Use to Triple by 2030, Due to Power-Hungry Electronics - 0 views

  •  
    The IEA says in a new "Gigawatts and Gadgets" report that electricity consumption from power-hungry electronics could cause household energy use to triple by 2030. That means increased greenhouse gases from electric generation, and increased electric bills for creating that power.
1 - 20 of 24 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page