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springmaster
19-10-2011, 07:54 AM
Hi All

Can someone explain if natural gas can be use as refrigerant?


Rgs

chillerman2006
19-10-2011, 07:57 AM
Hi Springmaster

Its a dirty gas (contaminants/water)

R's chillerman

springmaster
19-10-2011, 08:02 AM
Dirty gas means hamful to ambient? or contains contaminates that are not easy to take out?

chillerman2006
19-10-2011, 08:12 AM
Hi springmaster

contaminants that will contaminate the oil/system

you would need a purification plant to remove them

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural-gas_processing

R's chillerman

taz24
19-10-2011, 08:47 AM
Hi All

Can someone explain if natural gas can be use as refrigerant?


Rgs

In short yes.....

But I would not like to use it because as the Chill mister says it is dirty and wet.
It also contains other gasses that are not what you want in the system.

Refrigerant grade gas is refrigerant grade because it is dry and almost pure quality.

If you use natural gas your system will suffer moisture problems and contamination...

By the time you clean, filter, dry and process the stuff you could have bought the
refrigerant grade for a fraction of the cost and it would work straight from the cylinder.

All the best

taz

.

NoNickName
19-10-2011, 11:21 AM
If by natural gas you mean ch4 (methane) as all other alkanes (propane, butane, etc...) yes, it can be used as a refrigerant for ultra-cryo temperatures (boiling point -161°C). As said by other, it needs to be purified to refrigerant grade.

springmaster
19-10-2011, 02:37 PM
Thanks for the explanations