Odds and ends mostly w/o comment
1. NIH budget requires free access to papers written about NIH research. There can be up to one year delay.
2. ACS wants $1000 per article for open posting of articles. Here is more on these issues
3. German car manufacturers are moving to R744 for air conditioning to replace HFC-134A. That's CO2 in plainspeak. There are problems, it requires high pressure seals and don't work so good when it's real hot out. HFC-134a has to be replaced because of its global warming potential.
4. Other replacements are not looking too good. Dupont and Honeywell are pushing something called HFO-1234yf. More here
Eli has proposals to finish.
Thursday, January 17, 2008
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1 comment:
"That's CO2 in plainspeak. There are problems, it requires high pressure seals and don't work so good when it's real hot out. HFC-134a has to be replaced because of its global warming potential."
It's a pity no-one in the car industry is interested in developing safe hydro-carbon refrigerant systems because these use far less energy than CO2 or other systems, besides the gas itself having a low global warming potential. I'd really like to know why the man who did a lot of good research on this, Ian Maclaine-Cross, decided to do an experiment involving himself and other occupants in a car when he should have known the experiment was dangerous. It involved releasing nearly 700g of hydrocarbon inside a car which his own publications say would be dangerous. It may be worth emailing him if I can't find a report on it.
Chris O'Neill
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