Brand Name: Neutral
Model Number: R600A
Place of Origin: Zhejiang, China (Mainland)
Detailed Product Description
High Purity R600a HC Refrigerant Gas 75-28-5 With 6.5kg Disposable Cylinder
Quick Detail:
Isobutane (i-butane), also known as methylpropane, is an isomer of butane. It is the simplest alkane with a tertiary carbon. Concerns with depletion of the ozone layer by freon gases have led to increased use of isobutane as a gas for refrigeration systems, especially in domestic refrigerators and freezers, and as a propellant in aerosol sprays. When used as a refrigerant or a propellant, isobutane is also known as R-600a. Some portable camp stoves use a mixture of isobutane with propane, usually 80:20. Isobutane is used as a feedstock in the petrochemical industry, for example in the synthesis of isooctane.
Description:
Isobutane is used as a refrigerant.The use in refrigerators started in 1993 when Greenpeace presented the Greenfreeze project with the German company Foron. In this regard, blends of pure, dry "isobutane" (R-600a) (that is, isobutane mixtures) have negligible ozone depletion potential and very low Global Warming Potential (having a value of 3.3 times the GWP of carbon dioxide) and can serve as a functional replacement for R-12, R-22, R-134a, and other chlorofluorocarbon or hydrofluorocarbon refrigerants in conventional stationary refrigeration and air conditioning systems.
In the Chevron Phillips slurry process for making high-density polyethylene, isobutane is used as a diluent. As the slurried polyethylene is removed, isobutane is "flashed" off, and condensed, and recycled back into the loop reactor for this purpose.
Isobutane is also used as a propellant for aerosol cans and foam products.
UN Number 1969
CAS Number 75-28-5
Application:
As a refrigerant, isobutane has an explosion risk in addition to the hazards associated with non-flammable CFC refrigerants. Reports surfaced in late 2009 suggesting the use of isobutane as a refrigerant in domestic refrigerators was potentially dangerous. Several refrigerator explosions reported in the United Kingdom are suspected to have been caused as a result of isobutane leaking into the refrigerator cabinet and being ignited by sparks in the electrical system.[8] Although unclear how serious this could be, at the time this report came out it was estimated 300 million refrigerators worldwide use isobutane as a refrigerant.
Substitution of this refrigerant for motor vehicle air conditioning systems not originally designed for R600a is widely prohibited or discouraged, on the grounds that using flammable hydrocarbons in systems originally designed to carry non-flammable refrigerant presents a significant risk of fire or explosion.
Vendors and advocates of hydrocarbon refrigerants argue against such bans on the grounds that there have been very few such incidents relative to the number of vehicle air conditioning systems filled with hydrocarbons.
Specifications:
Property of chloride : |
Molecular Weight58.12Boiling Point, °C-11.70Critical Temperature, °C134.71Critical Pressure, Mpa3.64Specific Heat of Liquid, 25°C, [KJ/(kg•°C)]2.38ODP0GWP0.1Critical Density, (g/cm3)0.221 |
Packing |
Disposable cylinder 14.3lb/6.5kg; Recyclable cylinder 100L, 926L; ISO-Tank. |
Quality standard : |
Purity, %≥99.5Moisture, PPm≤10Acidity, PPm≤1Vapor Residue, PPm≤100AppearanceColorless, No turbidOdorNo Strange Stench |
Application: |
Refrigerant, can replace R12. |