학술논문

Fluorinated ethers: A new series of CFC substitutes. Rept. for Aug 88-Oct 91
Document Type
Technical Report
Author
Source
Other Information: Presented at the International CFC and Halon Alternatives Conference, Baltimore, MD., December 3-5, 1991. Prepared in cooperation with Electric Power Research Inst., Palo Alto, CA. Sponsored by Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC. Air and Energy Engineering Research Lab
Subject
54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
29 ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY AND ECONOMY CHLOROFLUOROCARBONS
MATERIAL SUBSTITUTION
ETHERS
SYNTHESIS
AIR POLLUTION CONTROL
CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
FLUORINATION
FLUORINE COMPOUNDS
OZONE
PHOTOCHEMICAL REACTIONS
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
VAPOR PRESSURE
CHEMICAL REACTIONS
CONTROL
HALOGEN COMPOUNDS
HALOGENATION
ORGANIC CHLORINE COMPOUNDS
ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
ORGANIC FLUORINE COMPOUNDS
ORGANIC HALOGEN COMPOUNDS
ORGANIC OXYGEN COMPOUNDS
POLLUTION CONTROL
THERMODYNAMIC PROPERTIES 540120* -- Environment, Atmospheric-- Chemicals Monitoring & Transport-- (1990-)
290301 -- Energy Planning & Policy-- Environment, Health, & Safety-- Regional & Global Environmental Aspects-- (1992-)
Language
English
Abstract
The paper discusses fluorinated ethers, a new series of chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) substitutes. Compounds synthesized to produce substances with suitable refrigerant properties have generally left out sulfur, nitrogen, and oxygen. The general result is that all currently proposed substitutes for CFC and halon replacements have been alkanes. Because of the limited number of compounds of these elements having suitable properties and the current decision to phase out CFCs and (eventually) hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs), restricting the search to alkanes only is no longer tenable. Consideration of fluorinated ethers effectively doubles the potential list of contenders. The fact that divalent oxygen in a fluorocarbon chain has only a modest effect on vapor pressure, compared to the alkane of similar carbon number and substitution, should be a strong incentive to investigate these compounds. Several new fluorinated compounds have been synthesized and characterized. Additionally, several compounds for which data were not available were synthesized. These compounds, both new and two 'revisited' ones, could function as replacement working fluids in many applications requiring similar properties. Without chlorine, all have zero ozone depletion potential.