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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Absorption Cooling - The Rise and Fall and Rise - Short #272

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Education, Business, Self-improvement, Careers

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 30 December 2025

⏱️ 12 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast episode, Bryan goes on another history journey, retelling the story of the rise and fall and rise of absorption cooling. Some of the first HVAC/R engineers cooled buildings with fire; they used absorption refrigeration, which ran on heat instead of electricity.

In the early 1800s, French scientist Michael Faraday showed that gases like ammonia could absorb heat as they evaporated. Instead of compressing the vapor, engineers looked for a way to absorb the heat from the vapor and drive it back out. In 1859, Ferdinand Carré invented a machine that boiled ammonia, absorbed the vapor into water, and reheated the mixture to desorb the ammonia, creating a self-contained refrigeration machine powered by heat alone (including waste steam from boilers). This ammonia-water absorption machine could freeze water and chill brine, and it became popular in the 1880s.

An absorption system has an evaporator that boils refrigerant, which is then absorbed into another liquid and creates a strong solution. Heat drives refrigerant back out of the solution as a vapor, where it is then condensed back to a liquid and metered. However, while they were reliable, they were heavy, expensive, and slow to respond. In the 1920s and 1930s, the rise of practical sealed electric compression systems began replacing absorption refrigeration infrastructure. By the mid-1900s, absorption chillers were replaced in all but a few applications.

Absorption didn't completely vanish, in part thanks to Servel, which continued manufacturing absorption refrigeration systems for industrial applications and rural areas with unreliable electricity. By the 1960s, Japan and Europe refined the design with lithium bromide instead of ammonia. Absorption chillers are still present, but their complexity, maintenance demands, and poor efficiency still make them impractical for most refrigeration purposes. However, with concerns about the electrical grid and decarbonization initiatives on the rise, absorption refrigeration in hybrid systems with improved efficiency and a heat source obtained from gas turbines and biomass boilers looks promising.

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Jabba-Dabadoo, this is the HVAC school podcast. I'm Brian. And yes, my voice is still raspy and off because it's winter and I'm a Floridian and I'm just not used to anything being even slightly cold. And it's gotten down to the 30s the last couple days here. It's nuts.

0:18.6

Anyway, this is a short episode about absorption cooling, the rise

0:22.5

and fall and rise again of absorption. And before we do that, we're going to thank our great sponsors.

0:29.5

Carrier and Carrier.com. I've been a carrier dealer for many years. Carrier has their new

0:35.8

green speed extreme super high efficiency heat pumps out on the market now.

0:40.8

Find out more by going to Carrier.com.

0:44.1

Refrigeration technologies and their Viper Pan and Drain Treatment.

0:48.9

Viper pan and drain treatment is a spray gel that you can put in your drain pan in the bottom rows of the

0:54.6

evaporator coil. It utilizes enzyme-based cleaning, which works on tough sludge, biofilm, and works

1:02.7

wonders on our climate here in Florida, unique challenges like bacterial zuglia, otherwise known

1:08.7

as elephant's not. It's also non-toxic and food safe.

1:12.5

It's been shown to outlast traditional drain tabs and lubricates the drain assembly to keep those

1:17.9

drains clear. Who doesn't want a lubricated drain assembly? Am I right? Find out more about the

1:22.9

pan and drain treatment from Viper at RefugeTech.com.

1:29.4

Navac at navakglobal.com and their A2L compatible refrigerant recovery units, specifically

1:35.2

the NR7. This thing is just 20 pounds, which is really light for a recovery unit in case

1:41.4

you have never weighed them. The NR7 is built with efficiency

1:44.9

in mind. It has an oil-free compressor and a large condenser inside to dissipate heat

1:50.2

quickly as you recover, which makes it go faster. Has twin cylinders with a brushless DC motor,

1:57.1

a large fan with plenty of room for airflow within the body of the recovery machine.

2:02.5

It has a CSA safety certification with full tank, overload, and high pressure protection,

2:08.1

and it won silver at the 2024 AHR Expo dealer design awards for best electronic tool,

...

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