Dictionary Definition
refrigerated adj : made or kept cold by
refrigeration; "keep the milk refrigerated"; "a refrigerated
truck"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Verb
refrigerated- past of refrigerate
Extensive Definition
Refrigeration is the process of removing heat from an enclosed space, or
from a substance, and rejecting it elsewhere for the primary
purpose of lowering the temperature of the enclosed space or
substance and then maintaining that lower temperature. The term
cooling refers generally
to any natural or artificial process by which heat is dissipated.
The process of artificially producing extreme cold temperatures is
referred to as cryogenics.
Cold is the absence of heat, hence in order to
decrease a temperature, one "removes heat", rather than "adding
cold." In order to satisfy the
Second Law of Thermodynamics, some form of work must be
performed to accomplish this. This work is traditionally done by
mechanical
work but can also be done by magnetism, laser or other means.
However, all refrigeration uses the three basic methods of heat
transfer: convection, conduction,
or radiation.
Historical applications
Ice harvesting
The use of ice to refrigerate and thus preserve
food goes back to prehistoric times. Through the ages, the seasonal
harvesting of snow and ice was a regular practice of most of the
ancient cultures: Chinese, Hebrews, Greeks, Romans, Persians. Ice
and snow were stored in caves or dugouts
lined with straw or other
insulating materials. The Persians stored ice in pits called
yahairas. Rationing of
the ice allowed the preservation of foods over the cold periods.
This practice worked well down through the centuries, with icehouses
remaining in use into the twentieth century.
In the 16th century, the discovery of chemical
refrigeration was one of the first steps toward artificial means of
refrigeration. Sodium
nitrate or potassium
nitrate, when added to water, lowered the water temperature and
created a sort of refrigeration bath for cooling substances. In
Italy, such a solution was used to chill wine.
During the first half of the 19th century, ice
harvesting became big business in America. New Englander
Frederic
Tudor, who became known as the "Ice King", worked on developing
better insulation
products for the long distance shipment of ice, especially to the
tropics.
First refrigeration systems
The first known method of artificial
refrigeration was demonstrated by William
Cullen at the University of Glasgow in Scotland in 1748. Cullen
used a pump to create a partial vacuum over a container of
diethyl
ether, which then boiled ,
absorbing heat
from the surrounding air. The experiment even created a small
amount of ice, but had no practical application at that time.
In 1805, American inventor Oliver Evans
designed but never built a refrigeration system based on the
vapor-compression refrigeration cycle rather than chemical
solutions or volatile liquids such as ethyl ether.
In 1820, the British scientist Michael
Faraday liquefied ammonia and other gases by using
high pressures and low temperatures.
An American living in Great Britain, Jacob
Perkins, obtained the first patent for a vapor-compression
refrigeration system in 1834. Perkins built a prototype system and
it actually worked, although it did not succeed commercially.
In 1842, an American physician, John Gorrie,
designed the first system for refrigerating water to produce ice.
He also conceived the idea of using his refrigeration system to
cool the air for comfort in homes and hospitals (i.e.,
air-conditioning). His system compressed air, then partially cooled
the hot compressed air with water before allowing it to expand
while doing part of the work required to drive the air compressor.
That isentropic
expansion cooled the air to a temperature low enough to freeze
water and produce ice, or to flow "through a pipe for effecting
refrigeration otherwise" as stated in his patent granted by the
U.S.
Patent Office in 1851. Gorrie built a working prototype, but
his system was a commercial failure. Alexander Twining began
experimenting with vapor-compression refrigeration in 1848 and
obtained patents in 1850 and 1853. He is credited with having
initiated commercial refrigeration in the United States by
1856.
Vapor-compression cycle
-
- (See Heat pump and refrigeration cycle and Vapor-compression refrigeration for more details)
The vapor-compression cycle is used in most
household refrigerators as well as in many large commercial and
industrial refrigeration systems. Figure 1 provides a schematic
diagram of the components of a typical vapor-compression
refrigeration system. A much less common definition is: 1 tonne of refrigeration is the rate
of heat removal required to freeze a metric ton (i.e., 1000 kg) of
water at 0 °C in 24 hours.
Based on the heat of
fusion being 333.55 kJ/kg, 1 tonne of refrigeration = 13,898
kJ/h = 3.861 kW. As can be seen, 1 tonne of refrigeration is 10%
larger than 1 ton of refrigeration.
Most residential air conditioning units range in
capacity from about 1 to 5 tons of refrigeration.
See also
References
Additional reading
- Refrigeration volume, ASHRAE Handbook, ASHRAE, Inc., Atlanta, GA
- Stoecker and Jones, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, Tata-McGraw Hill Publishers
- Mathur, M.L., Mehta, F.S., Thermal Engineering Vol II
- MSN Encarta Encyclopedia
- Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning
External links
- "The Refrigeration Cycle", from HowStuffWorks
- American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE)
- British Institute of Refrigeration
- Refrigerant Recovery Environment Services
- "Notes on vapor-compression refrigeration", Queens University (Canada)
- "The ideal vapor compression refrigeration cycle", University of Nevada (US)
- Refrigeration History
- Scroll down to "Continuous-Cycle Absorption System"
- US Department of Energy: Technology Basics of Absorption Cycles
- Calendar of Inventive Contributors to the Development of Refrigeration, 1748-1885, a short history of the evolution of the refrigerator.
- Refrigeration (from The Handbook of Texas Online)
refrigerated in German: Kühlung
refrigerated in Spanish: Refrigeración
refrigerated in French: Réfrigération
refrigerated in Indonesian: Refrigerasi
refrigerated in Italian: Refrigerazione
refrigerated in Hebrew: קירור
refrigerated in Dutch: Koeltechniek
refrigerated in Japanese: 冷却
refrigerated in Portuguese: Refrigeração
refrigerated in Slovenian: Hladilni sistem
refrigerated in Serbian: Хлађење
refrigerated in Swedish: Kylning
refrigerated in Chinese: 冷冻