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Freon Free Refrigerator To Store Your Food
February 27, 2007

Freon Free Refrigerator To Store Your Food

Russian scientists have come out with a semiconducting material with thermal conductivity two times lower than any known analogue has. The material is a successful intermediate on the way to thermoelectric refrigeration, in other words, to safe noiseless refrigerators, which require no cooling agents.

These unique substances consist of geometrically adjusted cells, which contain single atoms or ions, having no strong covalent binding with neighbouring atoms. Not long ago clathrates (the word “ clathrate” origins from Latin “clatratus” meaning “protected with lattice”) were exotic even for expert chemists, but now scientists don’t use quotation marks while describing said compounds and consider clathrates to be highly promising thermoelectric materials. Scientists from Moscow State University have successfully developed semiconducting clathrates with anomalously low thermal conductivity (0.45 W/mK), which is 2.5 times lower than any known commercial material has.

If you imagine a simplest device, consisting of two connected semiconductors of n- and p-type, says the head of the project professor Shevelkov, you know that when electric current passes from n-semiconductor to p-semiconductor, charge carriers – electrons (n) or holes (p) – move away from operating contact and carry heat with them. Therefore, operating contact, which is also known as “active element”, cools down. A pile of such simple devices can provide cooling for about 150 degrees Centigrade.

To produce such devices, scientists need appropriate materials with seemingly contradicting properties – they should have high electrical conductivity and low thermal conductivity. Existing materials are not sufficiently effective – their characteristics allow making cooling devices for laser and electronic equipment and cool boxes. In order to compete with ordinary refrigerator compressors thermoelectric materials should be at least twice as effective as they are now. Semiconducting clathrates are one of possible solutions.

Simple description of suggested technique is that heat and electricity carriers in such units are separated in space: clathrate frame has electrical conductivity for moving charge carrriers and atoms, located in vesicles, dissipate heat with their fluctuations, thus providing low thermal conductivity for a material.

This type of materials – clathrates with tin and phosphorus atoms as a frame and iodine, chlorine and tellurium atoms sitting in vesicles – scientists from Moscow are currently studying. The work is a hard one – synthesizing clathrates with given composition and proving that all atoms are located strictly on their places is a difficult task. Gaining required properties, high thermoelectric figure of merit, for instance, is even more difficult. However, scientists announced first successful experiments on developing semiconducting materials with anomalously low thermal conductivity.

Current research of the think-tank is focused on several directions – development of materials, able to maintain their properties under extremely low temperatures (less than 160 K) for future development of thermoelectric cooling units for superconducting materials among them. And we should not forget about developing materials, which could be used in industrial cold-storage plants and household refrigerators of new generation. Mentioned refrigerators have one great advantage – they do not contain moving particles and hazardous cooling chemical agents – freons, thus being immensely safe and environmentally friendly.

Source:
    Russian Science News

Kizilova Anna



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Your comments
Ali Hegaig :
pls Can you send me more information about refrigeration for dairy factory

Added: 14 May 2007 10:16

Kizilova Anna :
We will contact you with more information.

Added: 14 May 2007 16:12

Jonathan Lee Martin Elizondo :
Please keep me up-to-date, on this Refrigerator that uses NO Freon.

Added: 22 July 2007 07:05

Kizilova Anna :
We will keep our readers updated with the information about this particular development, as well as about some other interesting scientific achievements. Best regards, Russia IC team

Added: 23 July 2007 16:05

James Sun :
Can you tell me if this cooling effect is the same as or related to the Peltier effect? If not, how would this compare with the Peltier effect in the same characterisitic length scale?

Added: 10 October 2007 17:13

Kizilova Anna :
The disadvantage of the Peltier Effect refrigerator is that it's not very powerful, nor is it very efficient. To my mind, this technology looks as an improvement of Peltier coolers toward higher efficiency.

Added: 11 October 2007 14:11

Sam White :
Hi Anna, what is your email? Thanks, Sam White +1-617-512-8811

Added: 12 December 2008 00:03

Sam White :
We are an MIT funded clean-tech startup and would like to contact the TEC Russian scientists. Thanks, Sam White

Added: 17 December 2008 23:47

Jack Goldmaker :
Can you tell me when you will be developing a model for the home. There is an extremely lucrative market if you can also provide a freezer unit for home.

Added: 04 July 2009 17:54

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