Title of Invention

"TRACER-CONTAINING COMPOSITIONS AND METHOD FOR MAKING THE SAME"

Abstract A tracer-containing composition, comprising a refrigeration/heating fluid comprising an unsaturated compound of the general formula CwF2W-xHxOz, wherein w is from 3 to 8, z is from 0 to 2 and 2w-x is a positive integer; and up to 1000 ppm of a tracer; said tracer being analytically detectable and selected from the group consisting of hydrofluorocarbons, deuterated hydrofluorocarbons, deuterated hydrocarbons, perfluorocarbons, fluoroethers, brominated compounds, iodated compounds, nitrous oxide and combinations thereof; with the proviso that said refrigeration/heating fluid is different from said tracer.
Full Text CROSS REFERENCE(S) TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims the priority benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application 60/548,085, filed February 26, 2004, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention.
The present invention relates to the field of compression refrigeration and air conditioning. Specifically, the present invention relates to a composition comprising refrigerant and tracer compound(s). Additionally, the present invention relates to a method for the identification of refrigerant gases after leaving the custody of the original manufacturer and the verification of refrigerant authenticity. The aforementioned method provides for the detection of tracer compounds, which in turn, may alert the refrigeration industry to the occurrence of dilution, adulteration, contamination or other unauthorized modification of refrigeration products.
2. Description of Related Art.
Environmental concerns have led the refrigeration industry to high levels of consciousness around the responsible use of refrigerants. The refrigeration industry, as well as the society at large, benefits when everyone who manufactures, distributes, uses refrigerants, or services refrigeration and air conditioning equipment uses all applicable measures to keep equipment operating at the highest achievable level of energy efficiency. This reduces the amount of energy consumed by the equipment. Higher than necessary energy consumption, as well as leakage of refrigerants, can contribute to unnecessary pollution of our atmosphere and waste of existing resources. This unnecessary waste also comes at a cost to the consumer for replacement of leaked refrigerant.
In response to environmental concerns, manufacturers of refrigerants have developed new refrigerant products that allow higher levels of energy efficiency when used in properly designed equipment. The new generation HFC refrigerants have less impact on the
environment than older generation chlorinated refrigerants in the event
that they inadvertently leak into the atmosphere. The HFC refrigerants
have zero ozone depletion potential, and in general have less tropospheric
climate, change potential than the refrigerants they replace. In addition,
industry practices now mandate the elimination of leaks from most types of
operating equipment, and require that refrigerant gas be recovered from
equipment when that equipment is taken out of service or is opened to
allow service work to be performed.
While the new high efficiency refrigerants and new responsible use
policies are benefiting the environment, the benefit is not as great as it
could be. In some instances, the recovered refrigerant gases are not
properly reclaimed or recycled. The recovered refrigerant may be reinstalled
back into other pieces of equipment without being properly
reclaimed and cleaned to remove any harmful or energy efficiency
reducing impurities which may have been introduced in handling or as a
result of poorly performing or damaged equipment. The equipment into
which this refrigerant is introduced will then not operate at peak efficiency,
and will consume more energy than necessary.
In addition, used refrigerant can be blended with virgin refrigerant,
which generally results in a non-standard refrigerant gas composition.
Similarly, used refrigerant can be re-packaged and sold as virgin
refrigerant, without certification of purity and quality. These practices may
result in increased atmospheric pollution and increased energy use, and
places expensive refrigeration hardware at risk of being damaged.
In addition to negative environmental and equipment impact, there
are economic losses to the refrigerant manufacturers and distributors.
Refrigerant manufacturers make significant investments into the
development of the quality new refrigerants products. Refrigerant
distributors similarly have invested in equipment for the proper protection
of refrigerants from contamination during packaging, storage, and
distribution of refrigerants When refrigerants are diluted or blended with
recovered refrigerants, and sold as virgin refrigerant, manufacturers and
distributors do not receive the benefit of their investment.
Fof the foregoing reasons, there has been a need for the ability to
positively determine when a refrigerant composition is diluted or altered in
any way, in a manner that does not compromise performance or the
product properties to any measurable extent.
PCT/US2005/005595
The present invention addresses this need by providing a highly
secure way to label virgin refrigerant product.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed to a tracer-containing composition,
said composition comprising a refrigeration/heating fluid and at least one
tracer compound, said tracer compound being present and analytically
detectable and being selected from the group consisting of
hydrofluqrocarbons, deuterated hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons,
fluoroethers, brominated compounds, iodated compounds, alcohols,
aldehydes and ketones, nitrous oxide and combinations thereof.
Additionally, the present invention relates to a composition as stated
above wherein at least one of said tracer compound is present as a single
pre-determined isomer.
The present invention further relates to a method of using the
present inventive tracer-containing compositions, said method comprising
combining said tracer compound with said refrigeration/heating fluid to
make a tracer-containing refrigerant composition, and detecting the
presence of said tracer compound in said tracer-containing refrigerant
composition. Said method may comprise detecting the occurrence of
dilution, adulteration or contamination of said composition.
Also, the present invention relates to use of the tracer-containing
composition in a method for producing refrigeration comprising
evaporating said composition in the vicinity of a body to be cooled and
thereafter condensing said composition. And the present invention
additionally relates to a method of using the tracer-containing refrigerant
composition for producing heat comprising condensing said composition in
the vicinity of a body to be heated and thereafter evaporating said
composition.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Applicants specifically incorporate the entire contents of ail cited
refernces in this disclosure. Further, whan an amount, concentration, or
other value or parameter is given as either a range, preferred range, or a
list of upper preferable values and lower preferable values, this is to be
understood as specifically disclosing all ranges formed from any pair of
upper range limit or preferred value and any lower range limit r preferred
value, regardless of whether such ranges are separately disclosed. Where
a range of numerical values is recited herein, unless otherwise stated, the
range is intended to include the endpoints thereof, and all integers and
fractions within the range. It is not intended that the scope of the present
invention be limited to the specific values recited when defining a range.
The refrigeration/heating fluid of the present invention may be any
common refrigeration/heating fluid used in the refrigeration industry. Such
refrigeration/heating fluids may be hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs),
hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs),
fluorocarbon ethers (HFEs), hydrocarbons, carbon dioxide (CO2),
ammonia (NH3), or mixtures thereof. The fluorinated refrigeration/heating
fluids, HFCs, HCFCs, HFEs and PFCs may be referred to as fluorocarbon
refrigerants.
The fluorocarbon refrigerants of the present invention may
have 1-8 carbon atoms, contain at least one fluorine atom, optionally
contain chlorine and oxygen atoms, and have a normal boiling point of
from -90°C to 80°C. These fluorocarbons may be represented by the
general formula CwF2w+2-x-yHxCly0Z wherein w is 1-6, x is 0-9, y is 0-3, and
z is 0-2, and wherein 2w+2-x-y is a positive integer.
Preferred of the fluorocarbons are those in which w is 1 -6, x is :
1-5, y is 0-1, and z is 0-1. The present invention is particularly useful with
hydrofluorocarbon and hydrochlorofluorocarbon-based refrigerants.
Fluorocarbon refrigerants are commercial products available from a
number of sources such as E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co,
Fluoroproducts, Wilmington, DE, 19898, USA, or are available from
custom chemical synthesis companies such as PCR Inc., P.O. Box 1466,
Gainesville, Florida, 32602, USA, and additionally by synthetic processes
disclosed in publications such as Chemistry of Organic Fluorine
Compounds 2nd (revised edition), edited by Milos Hudlicky, published by
Ellis Harwood-Prentice Hall Publishers, 1992. Representative
fluorocarbons include but are not limited to: CHCIF2 (HCFC-22), CHF3
(HFC-23), CH2F2 (HFC-32), CH3F (HFC-41), CF3CF3 (FC-116), CHCIFCF3
(HCFC-124), CHF2CF3 (HFC-125), CH2CICF3 (HCFC-133a), CHF2CHF2
(HFC-134), CH2FCF3 (HFC-134a), CCIF2CH3 (HCFC-142b), CHF2CH2F
(HFC-143), CF3CH3 (HFC-143a), CHF2CH3 (HFC-152a), CHF2CF2CF3
(HFC-227ca), CF3CFHCF3 (HFC-227ea), CHF2CF2CHF2 (HFC-236ca),
CH2FCF2CF3 (HFC-236cb), CHF2CHFCF3 (HFC-236ea), CF3CH2CF3
(HFC-236fa), CH2FCF2CHF2 (HFC-245ca), CH3CF2CF3 (HFC-245cb),
CHF2CHFCHF2 (HFC-245ea), CH2FCHFCF3 (HFC-245eb), CHF2CH2CF3
(HFC-245fa), CH2FCF2CH2F (HFC-254ca), CH3CF2CHF2 (HFC-254cb),
CH2FCHFCHF2 (HFC-254ea), CH3CHFCF3 (HFC-254eb), CHF2CH2CHF2
(HFC-254fa), CH2FCH2CF3 (HFC-254fb), CH3CF2CH3 (HFC-272ca),
CH3CHFCH2F (HFC-272ea), CH2FCH2CH2F (HFC-272fa), CH3CH2CF2H
(HFC-272fb), CH3CHFCH3 (HFC-281ea), CH3CH2CH2F (HFC-281fa),
CHF2CF2CF2CF2H (HFC-338pcc), CF3CH2CF2CH3 (HFC-365mfc),
CF3CF2CF2OCHFCF3(Freon® E1), CF3CHFCHFCF2CF3 (HFC-43-
10mee), C4F9OCH3, and C4F9OC2H5.
Additionally, the fluorocarbon refrigerants of the present
invention may be represented by the general formula CwF2w.xHxOz,
wherein w may equal 3 to 8 and x may equal 0-17 and z may equal 0 to 2,
and wherein 2w-x is a positive integer. Such fluorocarbon refrigerants
include unsaturated compounds and other functionalized fluorocarbons,
such as CF3(CF2)3CH=CH2 (perfluorobutylethylene, PFBE),
CF3CF2C(O)CF(CF3)2 (perfluoroethylisopropylketone, PEIK), and
CF3C(O)CF(CF3)2(perfluoromethylisopropylketone, PMIK).
More preferred fluorocarbon refrigerants are the
hydrofluorocarbon and hydrochlorofluorocarbon-based refrigerants,, such
as, CHCIF2 (HCFC-22), CHF3 (HFC-23), CH2F2 (HFC-32), CHCIFCF3
(HCFC-124), CHF2CF3 (HFC-125), CHF2CHF2 (HFC-134), CH2FCF3
(HFC-134a), CF3CH3 (HFC-143a), CHF2CH3 (HFC-152a), CHF2CF2CF3
(HFC-227ca), CF3CFHCF3 (HFC-227ea), CF3CH2CF3 (RFC-236fa),
CHF2CH2CF3 (HFC-245fa), CHF2CF2CF2CF2H (HFC-338pcc),
CF3CHFCHFCF2CF3 (HFC-43-10mee), CF3(CF2)3CH=CH2
(perfluorobutylethylene, PFBE), CF3CF2C(O)CF(CF3)2
(perfluoroethylisopropylketone, PEIK), CF3C(O)CF(CF3)2
(perfluoromethylisopropylketone, PMIK); and the azeotropic and
azeotrope-like fluorocarbon refrigerant compositions, such as, HCFC-
22/HFC-152a/HCFC-124 (known by the ASHRAE designations, R-401A,
R-401B, and R-401C), HFC-125/HFC-143a/HFC-134a (known by the
ASHRAE designation, R-404A), HFC-32/HFC-125/HFC-134a (known by
ASHRAE designations, R-407A, R-407B, and R-407C), HCFC-22/HFC-
143a/HFC-125 (known by the ASHRAE designation, R-408A), HCFC-
22/HCFC-124/HCFC-142b (known by the ASHRAE designation: R-409A),
HFC-32/HFC-125 (R-410A), and HFC-125/HFC-143a (known by the
ASHRAE designation: R-507).
The fluorocarbon refrigerants of the present invention may
optionally further comprise up to 10 weight percent of dimethyl ether, or at
least one Ca to C5 hydrocarbon, e.g., propane, propylene, cyclopropane,
n-butane, isobutane, n-pentane, cyclopentane and neopentane (2,2-
dimethylpropane). Examples of fluorocarbons containing such C3 to C5
hydrocarbons are azeotrope-like compositions of HCFC-22/HFC-
125/propane (known by the ASHRAE designation, R-402A and R-402B),
HCFC-22/octafluoropropane/propane (known by the ASHRAE
designation, R-403A and R-403B), octafluoropropane/HCFC-
134a/isobutane (known by the ASHRAE designation, R-413A), HCFC-
22/HCFC-124/HCFC-142b/isobutane (known by the ASHRAE
designation,R-414A and R-414B), HFC-134a/HCFC-124/n-butane (known
by the ASHRAE designation, R-416A), HFC-125/HFC-134a/n-butane
(known by the ASHRAE designation, R-417A), HFC-125/HFC-
134a/dimethyl ether (known by the ASHRAE designation, R-419A), and
HFC-125/HFC-134a/isobutane (known by ASHRAE designation, R-422A).
The tracer compound of the present invention is selected from the
group consisting of hydrofluorocarbon, deuterated hydrocarbon or
hydrofluorocarbon, perfluorocarbon, fluoroether, brominated compound,
iodated compound, alcohol, aldehydes and ketone, nitrous oxide (N2O)
and combinations thereof. While there may be overlap between a defined
chemical compound, which may be a refrigeration/heating fluid, and a
chemical compound that may be defined as a tracer compound, the same
compound may not serve as both elements of a given composition.
Suitable tracer compound candidates are listed in Table 1.
(Table Removed)
The compounds listed in Table 1 are available commercially
(from chemical supply houses, such as Aldrich, Milwaukee, Wl) or may be
prepared by processes known in the art.
Single tracer compounds may be used in combination with a
refrigeration/heating fluid in the compositions of the present invention or
multiple tracer compounds may be combined in any proportion to serve as
a tracer blend. The tracer blend may contain multiple tracer compounds
from the same class of compounds or multiple tracer compounds from
different classes of compounds. For example, a tracer blend may contain
2 or more deuterated hydrofluorocarbons, or one deuterated
hydrofluorocarbon in combination with one or more perfluorocarbons.
Additionally, some of the compounds in Table 1 exist as multiple
'isomers, structural or optical. Single isomers or multiple isomers of the
same compound may be used in any proportion to prepare the tracer
compound. Further, single or multiple isomers of a given compound may
be combined in any proportion with any number of other compounds to
serve as a tracer blend.
The tracer-containing refrigerant compositions of the present
invention may be prepared by any convenient method to combine the
desired amount of the individual components. A preferred method is to
weigh the desired component amounts and thereafter combine the
components in an appropriate vessel. Agitation may be used, if desired.
By "analytically detectable" is meant that the tracer or tracer blend
may be detected by any analytical method capable of differentiating the
tracer from the refrigeration/heating fluid or capable of determining the
quantity of tracer present. In the case where a dilution of the tracercontaining
composition may have occurred, the tracer compound may be
present in a lesser quantity than originally added to the
refrigeration/heating fluid. Analytical detection of the lesser quantity would
aid the refrigeration industry. Such detection is capable of alerting the
industry to the occurrence of dilution, adulteration, or contamination.
Additionally, manufacturers, distributors and purchasers would be able to
verify or authenticate the source (ie., supplier) of the refrigerant
composition by comparing any quantity of detected tracer to the quantity
that was intentionally combined with refrigeration/heating fluid by the
source.
Gas chromatography (GC) is one analytical method that may be
used to detect and quantify the tracer or tracer blend in the
refrigeration/heating fluid. Any GC detector may be used that is capable
of detecting and quantifying the tracer compound. Such detectors
include, but are not limited, to flame ionization detector (FID), thermal
conductivity detector (TCD), electron-capture detector (ECD), photo-
ionization detector (PID), infrared detectors (IRD) and mass spectrometer
detectors (usually referred to as GC-MS when combined with a gas
chromatograph). Other analytical methods may be utilized which do not
require the gas chromatographic separation prior to detection. Such
additional analytical methods include but are not limited to nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) or infrared (IR) spectrometry.
When mixtures of this invention are analyzed using gas
chromatography, conditions capable of identifying and quantifying the
tracer in the presence of the refrigeration/heating fluid may be used. The
GC column used for the analysis must be chosen so as to be capable of
separating the tracer compound or components of the tracer blend from
the refrigeration/heating fluid. Both packed and capillary GC columns may
be used. The preferred GC columns are those known to provide
separation of fluorocarbon compounds from each other and classes of
candidate tracer compounds of the present invention.
The packed GC columns that may be useful in the present
invention are from about 1 meter to about 12 meters in length. Generally,
packed GC columns are constructed of stainless steel. The commercially
available packed GC columns that may be useful in the present invention
include but are not limited to: porous polymer stationary phase, such as
Porapak® Q or Porapak® T; silicone polymer stationary phases, such as
SP®-1000 on Carbopack® B supporter SP®-2100 (methyl silicone) on
Supelcoport® support, perfluorinated polymer stationary phase, Fluorcol®
on Carbopack ® B support; and polyethylene glycol stationary phases,
such as Carbowax® on Carbopack® C support. For those packed GC
columns that are packed with a polymer coated support, the polymer
loading may range from about 0.1 % to about 10%. Packed GC columns
listed here are available from Supelco (Bellefonte, PA).
Capillary GC columns which are found useful in the present
invention are available commercially. Capillary columns may vary in
length from about 10 meters to about 105 meters, but may also be longer
if two or more columns are joined together (e.g. 120 meters by joining two
60 meter capillary GC columns). The capillary GC columns that may be of
use in the present invention are generally constructed of fused silica
tubing and vary in inner diameter (ID) from about 0.1 millimeter to about
0.53 millimeter. The stationary phase for the capillary GC columns is
coated on the interior surface of the column and may vary in thickness
from about 0.1 micrometer to about 5 micrometers. The stationary phases
that may be of use in the present invention, include but are not limited to
the commercially available liquid polymer phases: RTX®-1 ((Crossbond®
100% dimethyl polysiloxane), RTX®-200 (Crossbond® trifluoropropylmethyl
polysiloxane), RTX®-1301 (Crossbond® 6% cyanopropylphenyl/94%
dimethyl polysiloxane), RTX®-1701 (Crossbond® 14%
cyanopropylphenyl/86% dimethyl polysiloxane) from Restek Corporation
(Bellefonte, PA). Porous layer open tubular (PLOT) capillary columns may
also be useful in the present invention. Such PLOT capillary GC columns
include, but are not limited to, the CP-PoraPLOT® Q (100% styrene
divinylbenzene) column from Varian Ohrompack (Middelburg, The
Netherlands).
Temperature and pressure conditions for the GC analysis will vary
depending upon the refrigeration/heating fluid and the tracer being used in
the composition. Cryogenic temperatures (sub-ambient, requiring liquid
nitrogen, dry ice or liquid carbon dioxide) may be used in order to provide
separation of low boiling components (either refrigeration/heating fluid or
tracer compound(s)), when necessary.
Tracer compounds or blends may be present in concentrations that
are detectable by whichever analytical method is chosen. Additionally, the
tracer concentration must be chosen such that the quantity of tracer or
tracer blend does not interfere with the performance of the
refrigeration/heating fluid. The tracer compound or tracer blend may be
present at a total concentration of about 50 parts per million by weight
(ppm) to about 1000 ppm. Preferably, the tracer compound or tracer
blend is present at a total concentration of about 50 ppm to about 500 ppm
and most preferably, the tracer compound or tracer blend is present at a
total concentration of about 100 ppm to about 300 ppm.
The present invention further relates to a method of using the
present inventive tracer-containing refrigerant compositions, said method
comprising combining said tracer compound with said refrigeration/heating
fluid to make a tracer-containing refrigerant composition, and detecting the
presence of said tracer compound in said tracer-containing refrigerant
composition. The present method is useful to (i) determine the occurrence
of dilution, adulteration or contamination or (ii) verify the source of the
refrigerant composition of said composition.
The present invention further relates to a method of using the
present inventive tracer-containing refrigerant composition, said method
comprising: (i) producing refrigeration by evaporating the tracercontaining
refrigerant composition in the vicinity of a body to be cooled
and thereafter condensing said composition; or (ii).producing heat by
condensing the tracer-containing refrigerant composition in the vicinity of
the body to be heated and thereafter evaporating said composition.
Vapor-compression refrigeration systems include an evaporator, a
compressor, a condenser, a liquid storage receiver and an expansion
device. A vapor-compression cycle re-uses refrigerant in multiple steps
producing a cooling effect in one step and a heating effect in a different
step. The cycle can be described simply as follows. Liquid refrigerant
enters an evaporator through an expansion device, and the liquid
refrigerant boils in the evaporator at a low temperature to form a gas and
produce cooling. The low-pressure gas enters a compressor where the
gas is compressed to raise its pressure and temperature. The highpressure
gaseous refrigerant then enters the condenser in which the
refrigerant condenses and discharges its heat to the environment. The
refrigerant returns to the expansion device through which the liquid
expands from the high-pressure level in the condenser to the low-pressure
level in the evaporator, thus repeating the cycle.
EXAMPLES
Tracer-containing refrigerant compositions of the present invention
were prepared and then analyzed using several different GC columns
under differing conditions of analysis. The retention times for the
refrigeration/heating fluid and tracer compounds were determined and are
given for each example. It should be noted that exact retention times
determined on a specific gas chromatograph and with a specific GC
column will vary slightly from retention times determined from a different
instrument and column.
All samples were analyzed on Agilent 6890 Gas Chromatographs
and the data collected and processed by Agilent Chemstation® software,
both available from Agilent Technologies (Palo Alto, CA).
EXAMPLE 1
A sample of R-22 (refrigerant HCFC-22, chlorodifluoromethane)
was spiked with 100 parts per million (ppm by weight) of PFC-C318
(perfluorocyclobutane). The sample was then analyzed by GC using the
conditions described below:
Column: RTX®-1701 (Crossbond® 14%cyanopropylphenyl/86% dimethyl
polysiloxane)
Length: 105 meters
Inner diameter: 0.25 millimeters
Stationary phase film thickness: 0.25 micrometers
Carrier gas and flow rate: He, 1.0 milliliter/minute
Oven temperature:
Initial temperature: -20 °C
Initial hold time: 15 minutes
Temperature ramp rate: 10°C/minute
Final temperature: 50 °C
Final hold time: 0 minutes (no final hold time)
Detector: Flame ionization detector (FID)
Temperature: 250 °C
Hydrogen flow rate: 42 milliliter/minute
Airflow rate: 450 milliliter/minute
Injection port: Split
Temperature: 150°C
Head pressure: 22 psi
Sample type: vapor, manual syringe injection
Sample size: 1.0 milliliter
Split ratio: 50:1
The retention times for the refrigerant, R-22, and tracer, PFC-C318,
are given in Table 2.
EXAMPLE 2
A sample of R-134a (refrigerant HFC-134a, 1,1,1,2-
tetrafluoroethane) was spiked with 100 parts per million (ppm by weight) of
HFC-236fa (1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoropropane). The sample was then
analyzed by GC using the conditions described below:
Column: RTX-1® (Crossbond® 100% dimethyl polysiloxane)
Length: 105 meters
Inner diameter: 0.25 millimeters
Stationary phase film thickness: 1.0 micrometers
Carrier gas and flow rate: helium, 0.75 milliliter/minute
Oven temperature:
Initial temperature: -20 °C
Initial hold time: 13 minutes
Temperature ramp rate: 5 °C/minute
Final temperature: 50 °C
Final hold time: 10 minutes
Detector: Flame ionization detector (FID)
Temperature: 250 °C
Hydrogen pressure: 20 psi
Air pressure: 45 psi
Injection port: Split
Temperature: 175 °C
Head pressure: 38 psi
Sample type: vapor, manual syringe injection
Sample size: 1.0 milliliter
Split ratio: 75:1
The retention times for the refrigerant, R-134a, and tracer, HFC-
236fa, are given in Table 3.
(Table Removed)
EXAMPLE 3
A sample of R-410A (refrigerant blend, 50 weight percent R-32,
difluoromethane, and 50 weight percent R-125, pentafluoroethane) was
spiked with 100 parts per million (ppm by weight) of HFE-236fa (1-
trifluoromethoxy-2,2,2-trifluoroethane). The sample was then analyzed by
GC using the conditions described below:
Column: 5% Fluorcol® on Carbopack® B, 60/80 mesh
Length: 20 feet (6.1 meters)
Diameter: 1/8 inch (0.32 centimeter)
Carrier gas and flow rate: helium, 30 milliliter/minute
Oven temperature:
Initial temperature: 60 °C
Initial hold time: 3 minutes
Temperature ramp rate: 8 °C/minute
Final temperature: 180°C
Final hold time: 10 minutes
Detector: flame ionization detector (FID)
Temperature: 250 °C
Hydrogen pressure: 20 psi
Air pressure: 45 psi
Injection port: Packed
Temperature: 250 °C
Head pressure: 67 psi
Sample type: vapor, sample valve injection
Sample size: 50 microliter
The retention times for the refrigerant, R-410A or specifically, R-32
and R-125, and tracer, HFE-236fa, are given in Table 4.
(Table Removed)








We Claim:
1. A tracer-containing composition, comprising:
a refrigeration/heating fluid comprising an unsaturated compound of the general formula CwF2w-xHxOz, wherein w is from 3 to 8, z is from 0 to 2 and 2w-x is a positive integer; and
up to 1000 ppm of a tracer; said tracer being analytically detectable and selected from the group consisting of hydrofluorocarbons, deuterated hydrofluorocarbons, deuterated hydrocarbons, perfluorocarbons, fluoroethers, brominated compounds, iodated compounds, nitrous oxide and combinations thereof; with the proviso that said refrigeration/heating fluid is different from said tracer.
2. The tracer-containing composition as claimed in claim 1 wherein the tracer is from 50 to 1000 ppm.
3. The tracer-containing composition as claimed in claim 1 or 2 wherein the tracer comprises a perfluorocarbon.
4. A method for making the tracer-containing composition as claimed in claim 1, comprising:
combining said refrigeration/heating fluid comprising an unsaturated compound of the general formula CwF2w-x HxOz, wherein w is from 3 to 8, z is from 0 to 2 and 2w-x is a positive integer with up to 1000 ppm of an analytically detectable tracer selected from the group consisting of hydrofluorocarbons, deuterated hydrofluorocarbons, deuterated hydrocarbons, perfluorocarbons, fluoroethers, brominated compounds, iodated compounds, nitrous oxide and combinations thereof; with the proviso that said refrigeration/heating fluid is different from said tracer.
5. The method as claimed in claim 4 wherein from 50 to 1000 ppm of the tracer is combined with said refrigeration/heating fluid.
6. The method as claimed in claim 4 wherein the tracer comprises a perfluorocarbon.

Documents:

4735-DELNP-2006-Abstract-(04-06-2012).pdf

4735-delnp-2006-abstract.pdf

4735-delnp-2006-assignment.pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-Claims-(04-06-2012).pdf

4735-delnp-2006-claims.pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-Correspondence Others-(04-06-2012).pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-Correspondence Others-(06-06-2012).pdf

4735-delnp-2006-Correspondence Others-(16-09-2014).pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-Correspondence Others-(21-06-2012).pdf

4735-delnp-2006-correspondence others.pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-Description (Complete)-(04-06-2012).pdf

4735-delnp-2006-description (complete).pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-Form-1-(04-06-2012).pdf

4735-delnp-2006-form-1.pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-Form-2-(04-06-2012).pdf

4735-delnp-2006-form-2.pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-Form-3-(04-06-2012).pdf

4735-delnp-2006-form-3.pdf

4735-delnp-2006-form-5.pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-GPA-(04-06-2012).pdf

4735-delnp-2006-gpa.pdf

4735-delnp-2006-pct-101.pdf

4735-delnp-2006-pct-210.pdf

4735-delnp-2006-pct-220.pdf

4735-delnp-2006-pct-237.pdf

4735-delnp-2006-pct-304.pdf

4735-delnp-2006-pct-409.pdf

4735-delnp-2006-pct-416.pdf

4735-DELNP-2006-Petition-137-(04-06-2012).pdf


Patent Number 262867
Indian Patent Application Number 4735/DELNP/2006
PG Journal Number 39/2014
Publication Date 26-Sep-2014
Grant Date 21-Sep-2014
Date of Filing 18-Aug-2006
Name of Patentee E. I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS AND COMPANY
Applicant Address 1007 MARKET STREET, WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19898, U.S.A.
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 THOMAS J. LECK 703 REGENCY HILL DRIVE, HOCKESSIN, DE 19707, USA.
2 STUART C. BRICKER 4663 BAILEY DRIVE, WILMINGTON, DE 19808, USA.
3 ALLEN C. SIEVERT 215 RHETT LANE, ELKTON, MA 21921, USA.
PCT International Classification Number C09K 5/00
PCT International Application Number PCT/US2005/005595
PCT International Filing date 2005-02-23
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 60/548,085 2004-02-26 U.S.A.
2 11/062,044 2005-02-18 U.S.A.