Summary
Supermarkets represent a refrigeration application area which is spearheading towards the total phase in of natural working fluids. Exposed to demanding customers where reputation is an important part of the business, focus is given to cost of ownership, and therefore the energy efficiency of the technical equipment, and the environmental profile. Due to the EU F-gas regulation, vendors supplying conventional, non-natural working fluid refrigeration equipment are facing challenges related to the legislative requirements and supply shortages. It forces them to implement less conventional refrigerants with lower Global Warming Potential (GWP) in their new products. The newly introduced next generation of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) with
ultra-low GWPs do have a very short (atmospheric) lifetime, however, the decomposing products are highly toxic in combination with water, and distributed everywhere it becomes a question whether they represent a safe and sustainable alternative. As Gustav Lorentzen said: “We should not try to solve a problem by introducing another problem”. Natural working fluids like CO2 have demonstrated to be an energy efficient and environmentally benign alternative, especially for supermarket applications. Since its fluid- and thermosphysical properties are quite different from most other working fluids, the refrigeration system designs have to be carefully adapted to the properties of CO2, thereby maximising the energy efficiency and minimising the total cost of ownership. Integrated CO2 systems can simultaneously provide refrigeration capacities at various temperature levels, air
conditioning (AC) & dehumidification, heating and even sanitary hot water at adequate temperature levels. A further integration of advanced thermal storage devices can enable centralised supermarket refrigeration systems to become a valuable element within smart (thermal) grids. Well designed and integrated systems can demonstrate reduced power consumption typically by more than 30 %. The article gives examples of the latest system developments applicable in commercial refrigeration / supermarkets.
Available documents
Format PDF
Pages: 11
Available
Free
Details
- Original title: Integrated CO2 solutions for supermarkets.
- Record ID : 30023830
- Languages: English
- Source: 13th IIR Gustav Lorentzen Conference on Natural Refrigerants (GL2018). Proceedings. Valencia, Spain, June 18-20th 2018.
- Publication date: 2018/06/18
- DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.18462/iir.gl.2018.1002
Links
See other articles from the proceedings (177)
See the conference proceedings
Indexing
-
Themes:
CO2;
Supermarkets, display cabinets - Keywords: Commercial application; R744; Review; Supermarket; Energy saving; CO2
-
Integrated CO2 solutions for supermarkets.
- Author(s) : HAFNER A., NEKSÅ P.
- Date : 2018/06/18
- Languages : English
- Source: 13th IIR Gustav Lorentzen Conference on Natural Refrigerants (GL2018). Proceedings. Valencia, Spain, June 18-20th 2018.
- Formats : PDF
View record
-
Application of CO2 in supermarkets in Europe.
- Author(s) : SIENEL T., HEINBOKEL B., HUFF H.
- Date : 2012/10/29
- Languages : English
- Source: ASHRAE/NIST Refrigerants Conference: moving towards sustainability.
- Formats : PDF
View record
-
CO2 : la solution pérenne en matière de fluide ...
- Author(s) : PONDICQ-CASSOU N., HEINBOKEL B., BURVINGT G.
- Date : 2014/04
- Languages : French
- Source: Revue générale du Froid & du Conditionnement d'air - vol. 104 - n. 1142
View record
-
Thematic file: Integrated CO2 soluti...
- Author(s) : HAFNER A., NEKSÅ P.
- Date : 2018/06/18
- Languages : English
- Formats : PowerPoint
View record
-
Análisis del subenfriamiento integrado en los s...
- Author(s) : CATALÁN-GIL J., NEBOT-ANDRÉS L., SÁNCHEZ D., et al.
- Date : 2018/06/19
- Languages : Spanish
- Source: CYTEF 2018. IX Congreso Ibérico y VII Congreso Iberoamericano de Ciencias y Técnicas del Frío, Valencia, España, 19-21 junio 2018.
- Formats : PDF
View record