HC-12a
No, CFC's are not stable. They react with ozone.
The Alternatives for CFC's are there in the market. These are called HCFC's.
CFC's are used in refrigerators. One of a CFC is R-12.
CFC's are present in Air conditioners. They are used for cooling.
HC-12a
"Freon" is a trademark name of DuPont for a series of HFC and CFC refrigerants which they manufactured - other companies manufactured and continue to manufacture the same refrigerants, but cannot use the name Freon for their product. Some of the refrigerants marketed under the name Freon are flammable, and some are not. The CFC refrigerants will almost certainly be flammable - the HFC refrigerants may or may not be.
A chlorofluorocarbon, or CFC, is an organic compound that contains carbon, chlorine and fluorine. It is produced as a volatile derivative of methane, ethane and propane. CFCs are generally considered as non-flammable.
Freon is not one specific type of refrigerant - the name is actually a trademark of DuPont, and is applied to a whole line of CFC and HFC refrigerants manufactured by them. Most of these refrigerants are not flammable.
CFC and ozone interact often. Here CFC's deplete ozone.
CFC is filled in the refrigerator and the process of compression , condensation and evaporation is because of CFC.....
cfc
No, its not. ozone is destroyed by CFC's.
No, CFC's are not stable. They react with ozone.
ChloroFluoroCarbon is the full form of CFC.
Yes, it is. CFC's are coolants created by man.
Angoulême CFC was created in 1920.