No, they have different boiling points and heat transfer capacities.
Most refrigerators use a coolant called freon.
Refrigerant - not coolant - and no, they are not compatible.
It will not work right.
A refrigerator that doesn't use much energy, compared to other refrigerators doing the same job.
In short no. Your cars cooling system is a sealed unit therefore it should not use any coolant whatsoever no matter the ambient temperature.
A refrigerator, a counter, and two bananas (preferably from the same cluster).
RV refrigerators do not use freon but rather ammonia. The ammonia is in a sealed unit called the cooling unit and you cannot add ammonia to this unit. If it goes bad it has to be replaced.
The same unit as you use to measure any mass. The SI unit for mass is the kilogram.
Gases in a refrigerator are used to transfer heat from the inside to the outside of the refrigerator. When the gas is compressed, it becomes hot, and when it expands, it cools down. This process allows the gas to absorb heat from inside the refrigerator, keeping the contents cool.
The use of a Coca-Cola refrigerator is to keep items cool, the same as any refrigerator. The only real difference is that the fridge is branded with Coca-Cola and thus makes it appealing to collectors of Coca-Cola items
Because they use an orange colored coolant in it.
Meters. It's the same unit you would use for length, or distance.