Environmentally Friendly Cooling with Carbon Dioxide

New circulating cooler with CO2 more than three thousand times less damaging than conventional refrigerants

30 Jan 2019
Frankie MacDonald
Administrator / Office Personnel

With the new Unichiller 220Tw CO2, Huber Kältemaschinenbau presents another milestone in environmentally friendly refrigeration technology. The new chiller uses CO2 as a refrigerant. CO2 or carbon dioxide (also known as R744) is a natural component of air and has been proven in refrigeration since the 19th century.

The colorless gas liquefied under pressure, has no ozone depletion potential (ODP = 0), and has a negligible greenhouse gas potential with a GWP = 1. If, for example, 1 kg of CO2 enters the atmosphere through a leak in the refrigerating circuit, this is 3780 times less damaging than with the conventional refrigerant R404A. In addition, CO2 is a so-called natural refrigerant which occurs in very large quantities in nature, i.e. it does not have to be generated with great energy expenditure. In addition, CO2 is non-flammable, non-toxic and chemically inert.

The new Unichiller CO2 is therefore a 100% environmentally friendly alternative to refrigerators with conventional synthetic refrigerants. The Unichiller is designed for working temperatures from -20 to +100°C, and offers a cooling capacity of 22 kW and a heating capacity of 12 kW. The circulation pump achieves a delivery rate of 200 l/min and 4.6 bar pressure. The cooler is equipped with the Pilot ONE touch-screen controller and therefore has numerous professional functions for demanding temperature control tasks.

Advantages:

  • Proven Unichiller technology
  • Environmentally friendly refrigeration technology
  • Ozone depletion potential equal to zero (ODP = 0)
  • Global warming potential negligible (GWP = 1)
  • Very good energy efficiency
  • Refrigerant non-flammable, non-toxic
  • High operational safety
  • Future-proof investment
    (not affected by the F-gas regulation)

More on reducing the environmental impact of research: 'Our Mission to Make Science More Sustainable' >>

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