Freon is probably the most misused term out there right now. When you say freon, you are referring to refrigerant. There are many different types of refrigerant. There is R-12 (Dichlorodiflouromethane), R-22, R-134A, etc... Each different refrigerant has different pressures at different temperatures and such. The best thing to do is determine which refrigerant your system is using, and then acquire a pressure/temperature chart for it, which can probably be found online. I think the best thing to do after determining which refrigerant your system uses is to Google search for a P/T chart.
Freon under pressure, much like LP and butane are liquid. At sea level pressure, freon becomes a gas. For freon to work in a refrigeration system, it must be able to transform from liquid to gas to liquid. So, to fill a system, it must be put into that system in liquid form. To do this, the bottle containing freon must be tipped, otherwise only freon the gas would be expelled.
Freon
Freon itself if not cold. Freon can be used to cool things by compressing the gas and then letting it expand. When a gas expands, it cools down (for more information about that, look up the Ideal Gas Law). Freon is very effective for this purpose and because it is a gas with a high heat capacity. Any gas can cool thing in the same way, but Freon does it particularly well. Unfortunately it is what is called a CFC, which destroys ozone in the atmosphere.
gas in rubbing alcahol
neoin some extent freon & mercury
Freon under pressure, much like LP and butane are liquid. At sea level pressure, freon becomes a gas. For freon to work in a refrigeration system, it must be able to transform from liquid to gas to liquid. So, to fill a system, it must be put into that system in liquid form. To do this, the bottle containing freon must be tipped, otherwise only freon the gas would be expelled.
by compressing freon as a gas it can be concentrated in one place where it can be condensed into liquid freon once again; in liquid form it can be evaporated as in the vapor/compression cycle of a mechanical refrigeration system absorbing heat as from the food in your fridge.
R 134 is freon gas. In small amounts, the exposure to freon gas is not dangerous. In larger amounts, freon can cause respiratory issues.
Used to Charge air conditioner - as ambient temperature increases gas pressure also increases. So when charging a/c systems, chart is referenced to make sure that proper amount of refrigerant is used
Freon gas is used in refrigerators, air conditioners, ovens and all other types of these things.
Which type of "Gas" Oxygen? nitrous oxide? Natural? Manufactured? LPG? Medical lines? commercial? industrial? institutional? Each "gas" has separate requirements such as Freon and the working pressure and corrosiveness /pressure of the fuel is also a factor in determining factor
About 1.6 bar R22 boils at -40c at atmospheric pressure and about 3.8 bar it boils at 0.0 c.
Freon
Freon gas? Mostly r134a.
It could be any of the three but at room temperature it is a gas. Freon is a gas
Freon itself if not cold. Freon can be used to cool things by compressing the gas and then letting it expand. When a gas expands, it cools down (for more information about that, look up the Ideal Gas Law). Freon is very effective for this purpose and because it is a gas with a high heat capacity. Any gas can cool thing in the same way, but Freon does it particularly well. Unfortunately it is what is called a CFC, which destroys ozone in the atmosphere.
Freon is a gas at room temperature and a liquid when cooled or compressed. Freon gas is colorless, non-flammable and relatively odorless. Some Freons have an ether-like odor.