PDF Publication Title:
Text from PDF Page: 197
Refrigeration and Heat Pump Technology, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm, Sweden, June 13-16 Kontomaris, K., Leck, T.J. 2009. Low GWP Refrigerants for Centrifugal Chillers, American Society of Heating, Refrigeration, and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), 2009 Annual Conference, Louisville, KY, USA, June 24 Kontomaris, K., and Leck, T.J. 2010a. Low GWP Refrigerants for Air Conditioning of Large Buildings, 10th REHVA World Congress, Sustainable Energy Use in Buildings, Antalya, Turkey, May 9-12 Kontomaris, K., Leck, T.J., and Hughes, J. 2010b. A Non-Flammable, Reduced GWP, HFC-134a Replacement in Centrifugal Chillers: DR-11. 13th International Refrigeration and Air- Conditioning Conference, Purdue University, Lafayette, IN, USA, July 12-15 Kontomaris, K. 2010c. A Low GWP Replacement for HCFC-123 in Centrifugal Chillers: DR-2, American Society of Heating, Refrigeration, and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) and United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) Conference, Road to Climate Friendly Chillers – Moving Beyond CFCs and HCFCs, Cairo, Egypt, September 30-October 1 Kontomaris, K., Kulankara, S., and Kauffman, J.P. 2013. A Reduced Global Warming Potential Replacement for HFC-134a in Centrifugal Chillers: XP-10, Measured Performance and Projected Climate Impact, HVAC&R Research McLinden M.O., Brown, J.S., Brignoli, R., Kazakov, A.F. and Domanski, P.A.. 2017. Limited Options for Low-Global-Warming-Potential Refrigerants. Nature Communications, Volume 8, February, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14476. Ophir, A. 2008. Mechanical Heat Pumps Using Water as Refrigerant for Ice Production and Air Conditioning, presentation, International District Energy Association (IDEA), 99th Annual Convention in Orlando, FL, Westborough, MA, USA Pearson, A. 2008a. Ammonia’s Future, ASHRAE Journal, American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), Atlanta, GA, USA, 50(2): 30-36 Pearson, A. 2008b. Water Chillers with Ammonia for Building Services, Natural Refrigerants – Sustainable Ozone and Climate Friendly Alternatives to HCFCs, published by German Technical Cooperation Programme Proklima, German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, Bonn, Germany, July Pearson, A. 2012. Opportunities for Ammonia, ASHRAE/NIST Refrigerants Conference, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD USA, American Society of Heating, Refrigeration, and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), Atlanta, GA, USA, October 29-30 Schultz, K., Kujak, S. 2012. System Drop-In Tests of R-134a Alternative Refrigerants (ARM-42a, N-13a, N-13b, R-1234ze(E), and Opteon TM (XP10) in a 230-RT Water Cooled Water Chiller, AHRI Low-GWP AREP Test Report #7, Nov. 19, 2012 (See website below for access) Schultz, K. 2014. Performance of R-410A and R-22 Low GWP Alternative Refrigerants at Elevated Temperatures, 15th International Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning Conference, Purdue University, Lafayette, IN, USA, July 14-17 Sharma, S. 2017. Mission Critical Cooling, Sensitivity Factors in Choosing between Air and Water Cooled Chillers. ASHRAE Journal, Volume 59, Number 10, October 2017 TEAP, 2013. Decision XXIV/7 Task Force Report, Additional Information on Alternatives to ODS. Report of the UNEP Technology and Economic Assessment Panel, UNEP Ozone Secretariat, Nairobi, Kenya, September 2013 184 2018 TOC Refrigeration, A/C and Heat Pumps Assessment ReportPDF Image | Heat Pumps Technical Options
PDF Search Title:
Heat Pumps Technical OptionsOriginal File Name Searched:
RTOC-assessment-report-2018_0.pdfDIY PDF Search: Google It | Yahoo | Bing
CO2 Organic Rankine Cycle Experimenter Platform The supercritical CO2 phase change system is both a heat pump and organic rankine cycle which can be used for those purposes and as a supercritical extractor for advanced subcritical and supercritical extraction technology. Uses include producing nanoparticles, precious metal CO2 extraction, lithium battery recycling, and other applications... More Info
Heat Pumps CO2 ORC Heat Pump System Platform More Info
CONTACT TEL: 608-238-6001 Email: greg@infinityturbine.com | RSS | AMP |