MOSCOW (MRC) -- Honeywell announced that its new Solstice refrigerant for supermarket refrigeration has been named a finalist for the R&D 100 Awards, sponsored by R&D Magazine, said the company in its press-release.
The R&D 100 Awards honors the 100 most innovative technologies and services of the past year. Evaluated with Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Solstice N40 (R-448A) refrigerant replaces high global warming potential (GWP) refrigerants in supermarket applications. It is part of a growing line of Solstice products for applications ranging from auto air conditioning to highly energy efficient appliance and building insulation that provide a significantly lower GWP.
"Naming Solstice N40 a finalist for this award recognizes more than a decade of research and investment that resulted in new solutions to help end customers lower their greenhouse gas impact while complying with new and anticipated regulations," said George Koutsaftes, refrigerants business director for Honeywell Fluorine Products. "In addition to its lower environmental impact, Solstice N40 is highly energy efficient, giving supermarket owners an added benefit."
Solstice N40 was nominated by the publication in the Mechanical Devices/Materials category. "This was a particularly strong year for research and development, led by many outstanding technologies that broadened the scope of innovation," said R&D Magazine Editor Lindsay Hock.
Global regulators are increasingly moving to phase out high GWP refrigerants and, on July 20, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) published landmark regulations that will phase out the use of many hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) refrigerants. The new regulation, effective July 2016, will require supermarkets, the largest consumers of the HFC refrigerant R-404A in the U.S., to discontinue its use as a retrofit refrigerant. R-404A will also not be permitted for use in new supermarkets beginning Jan. 1, 2017.
As MRC informed earlier, Honeywell has opened a new manufacturing facility in China to produce catalysts used to make components for plastics production.
MRC