
Cooling without climate cost: UK scientists eye air-conditioning revolution minus polluting gases
CAMBRIDGE, May 23 — The soft, waxy 'solid refrigerant' being investigated in a UK laboratory may not look very exciting, but its unusual properties promise an air-conditioning revolution that could eliminate the need for greenhouse gases.
The substance's temperature can vary by more than 50 degrees Celsius under pressure, and unlike the gases currently used in appliances, solid refrigerants do not leak.
'They don't contribute to global warming, but also they are potentially more energy efficient,' Xavier Moya, a professor of materials physics at the University of Cambridge, told AFP.
Approximately two billion air-conditioner units are in use worldwide, and their number is increasing as the planet warms.
Between leaks and energy consumption, the emissions associated with them are also increasing each year, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).
Moya has been studying the properties of these plastic crystals in his laboratory at the prestigious UK university for 15 years.
On his work surface, a large red and grey machine, topped with a cylinder, tests how the temperature of a substance changes under pressure.
The aim is to identify the best refrigerants among this class of materials, which are already used by the chemical industry and are relatively easy to obtain, even if the exact composition of the crystals eventually selected remains secret.
The phenomenon is invisible to the naked eye, but these crystals are composed of molecules that spin on their own axis.
When the substance is squeezed, that movement stops and the energy is dissipated in the form of heat.
When released, the substance cools its surroundings in what is known as the 'barocaloric effect'.
Chilled cans
'We're expecting demand for air conditioning to increase hugely, globally, between now and 2050,' Cliff Elwell, a professor of building physics at University College London, told AFP.
He believes barocaloric solids have the potential to be as efficient as gas, if not more so.
'But whatever we introduce as new technologies always has to hit the basic requirements,' which include being compact and quiet enough for use in homes and cars, he said.
Alongside his research at Cambridge, Moya founded the startup Barocal in 2019 to turn his research group's discoveries into tangible products.
It employs nine people and has its own laboratory, which is currently a modest container in a parking lot.
But the startup is attracting interest and in recent years has raised around US$4.5 million (RM19.18 million), notably from the European Innovation Council — an EU programme involving the UK — and Breakthrough Energy, an umbrella group of initiatives founded by US billionaire Bill Gates to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
It plans to increase its workforce to 25 or 30 this year.
The first air-conditioner prototype is the size of a large suitcase and hums quite loudly when a hydraulic circuit increases or decreases the pressure inside the four crystal-filled cylinders.
But it works.
A small refrigerator is attached to the system, and the cans of soda inside are perfectly chilled.
Cheaper bills
The prototype has 'not really been optimised yet for either mass, volume, or even sound', acknowledged Mohsen Elabbadi, a materials engineer at Barocal.
But the performance of the units they are working to perfect will eventually be comparable with those running on gas, he promised.
While the company is currently focusing on cooling, the technology could also be used to produce heat.
Several teams are studying these materials around the world, but the Cambridge team is a pioneer in the field, according to Breakthrough Energy, which estimates that these devices have the potential to reduce emissions by up to 75 per cent compared with traditional units.
Barocal hopes to launch a first product on the market within three years, according to commercial director Florian Schabus.
These will initially be cooling units for 'large shopping centres, warehouses, schools' and even 'data centres', he said.
The company reasons that the ultimate promise of cheaper bills will convince businesses to stump up the higher initial costs.
Barocal is eventually aiming for retail prices similar to traditional units, allowing it to launch in the residential market. — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
How a Hong Kong startup is going about recycling lithium batteries
A Hong Kong lithium battery recycling start-up is eyeing opportunities at home and in Southeast Asia amid overcapacity and intense competition for recyclable materials in mainland China. Hong Kong Science and Technology Park-based Achelous Pure Metals currently has a capacity to process 150 tonnes of used non-electric vehicle (EV) batteries a year. It has set up its operations in an industrial building in Tuen Mun in the New Territories, which is pending approval from the Environmental Protection Department. The company crushes the batteries into a so-called black mass – a powdery mixture of valuable metals like lithium, cobalt, copper, manganese and nickel – which is then refined into lithium carbonate, cobalt and nickel compounds. 'Our goal is to tackle the growing problem of discarded lithium-ion batteries by bringing scalable, movable, eco-friendly recycling to urban centres starting in Hong Kong, with plans to expand to [Southeast] Asia,' said Alan Wong Yuk-chun, the co-founder and technical director. He said that as the city lacked recycling facilities, small-scale recycling of non-EV batteries could be done in Hong Kong and showcased for overseas business development. Most spent EV batteries were collected and exported, he added. Between two and three tonnes of lithium batteries a day were collected from discarded electrical appliances and power banks in Hong Kong, he said. Achelous has built a pilot version of a robot-assisted system to sort, shred and sift materials derived from the batteries. The system, which is pending a patent, uses a combination of vacuum and heat treatment to evaporate and capture harmful materials and gases like epoxy adhesives and fluorine. The five-year-old start-up has built another pilot project that combines nanoparticles suspended in water or organic solvents that separates molecules based on their charge, to extract and refine valuable metals from the black mass. While Achelous has already deployed its technology at a client's recycling plant in east China's Jiangsu province, which is capable of processing 10,000 tonnes a year, it faces challenges in growing its business due to rampant growth in recycling capacity on the mainland in recent years. 'Our client's factory has to compete for black mass at higher and higher prices, while the prices of end-products like lithium carbonate keep falling amid oversupply,' said Shawn Cheng, Achelous' co-founder and research and development director. The price of battery-grade lithium carbonate, sometimes referred to as 'white gold', plunged nearly 90% to 60,600 yuan (US$7,725) a tonne in May, from 568,000 yuan in November 2022, according to Daiwa Capital Markets. Amid recycling overcapacity in China and US-China trade tensions that threaten to slow demand for lithium batteries, lithium oversupply may peak globally in 2027 before seeing a deficit in the early 2030s, according to a forecast by UK-based commodities consultancy Wood Mackenzie last month. Instead of swimming against the tide, Achelous changed its strategy, setting up a production line in Hong Kong while also seeking to help companies in Southeast Asia build 'micro-factories' to break down lithium batteries and produce black mass to export to its clients in China. The company is in talks with prospective partners to recycle spent lithium batteries from handheld transceivers used by the security industry in Hong Kong, and from discarded electronics in Malaysia and Singapore. 'We want to help [our] partners meet their future recycled content obligations and set up a system to keep track of the materials' footprint for compliance,' Cheng said. Globally, demand for recycled battery materials has been mostly driven by regulations implemented in 2023 by the European Union. The battery and recycling industry is working towards a 50% target for lithium recovery by 2027, rising to 80% by 2031. For cobalt, copper, lead and nickel, the target is 90% by 2027 and 95% by 2031. – South China Morning Post


Malay Mail
a day ago
- Malay Mail
Want to have a baby? UK warns against ‘skinny jabs' like Ozempic, Wegovy as animal tests show potential harm to newborns
LONDON, June 5 — The UK's medicine regulator warned Thursday against taking 'skinny jabs' to fight weight loss if trying to get pregnant or while breastfeeding because of their unknown effects on babies. The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) said popular jabs like Ozempic and Wegovy 'must not be taken during pregnancy, while trying to get pregnant, or during breastfeeding'. It urged women to use 'effective contraception while taking these medicines and, in some cases, for up to two months between stopping the medicine and trying to get pregnant'. 'Anyone who gets pregnant while using them should speak to their healthcare professional and stop the medicine as soon as possible... because there is not enough safety data to know whether taking the medicine could cause harm to the baby,' it added. Rebecca Reynolds, a professor of metabolic medicine at the University of Edinburgh, said there was 'hardly any available data from human studies' to know if the weight loss drugs were safe in pregnancy. 'The data from animal studies suggests the potential for harm with low birthweight and skeletal abnormalities, though more evidence is needed to assess if there are risks of taking these drugs in humans,' she added. The MHRA also warned about the impact of another weight-loss and diabetes injection, Mounjaro, on the effectiveness of oral contraception for people who are overweight. 'Therefore, those taking Mounjaro who are overweight and are using an oral form of contraception are advised to also use a non-oral form of contraception,' it said. Ying Cheong, a consultant in reproductive medicine at the University of Southampton, called the MHRA's advice 'both timely and necessary'. 'Gastrointestinal side-effects such as vomiting and diarrhoea can impair oral contraceptive absorption, increasing the risk of unintended pregnancy,' he said. — AFP


Free Malaysia Today
a day ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Clean energy investment rising despite economic uncertainty, says IEA
The International Energy Agency said the shift in US policies is expected to impact investment in renewable energy. (Freepik pic) PARIS : Investment in clean energy technologies is set to strike a record this year despite global economic uncertainty, double the spending on fossil fuels that will dip for the first time since 2020, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said today. While the Trump administration has been hostile to renewable energy sources and trumpets boosting oil production, the IEA said security concerns, as well as rising demand for electricity, including from artificial intelligence (AI) and data centres, are driving investment in clean energy sources. 'Amid the geopolitical and economic uncertainties that are clouding the outlook for the energy world, we see energy security coming through as a key driver of the growth in global investment this year to a record US$3.3 trillion as countries and companies seek to insulate themselves from a wide range of risks,' executive director Fatih Birol said as the IEA published its latest annual World Energy Investment report. It expects investment in clean technologies, including nuclear and electricity distribution grids, to hit a record US$2.2 trillion this year. Meanwhile, investment in oil, natural gas and coal is set to dip to US$1.1 billion, as companies react to falling prices and lower demand expectations. Most of drop is due to investment in US oil production, while investment in liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects there and elsewhere is expected to lead to the largest-ever capacity growth in 2026-2028. Since returning to the White House, Trump has slapped a 10% tariff on most trading partners, alongside higher rates on dozens of economies, including China and the EU, that have since been reduced or put on pause until early July while negotiations are held. Earlier this week the OECD slashed its annual global growth forecast, warning that Trump's tariffs blitz would stifle the world economy. However, energy investments haven't suffered yet. 'The fast-evolving economic and trade picture means that some investors are adopting a wait-and-see approach to new energy project approvals, but in most areas we have yet to see significant implications for existing projects,' Birol said. US renewables to 'level off' However, IEA said the shift in US policies would impact investment there in renewables. 'Spending on renewables and low-emissions fuels in the US almost doubled over the last 10 years but is now set to level off as supportive policies are scaled back,' it said. The report found the rapid rise in electricity demand – for industry, cooling, electric mobility, data centres and AI – was also shaping investment trends. The sector is expected attract US$1.5 trillion in investments this year, 50% more than fossil fuels. The IEA also noted that nuclear energy has been making a comeback as electricity demand from data centres risks doubling in the next five years. While renewables are expected to meet most of that additional demand, the steady supply that nuclear plants offer have prompted a number of tech companies to enter into supply agreements. However, the Paris-based IEA, which advises industrial nations on energy policy, warned that spending on electricity grids was not keeping up with investment into generation. In addition to lengthy permitting procedures, grid expansion was also being held back by tight supply of transformers and cable, it found. Despite the rising levels of investment in renewable energy production, the IEA said it must double to achieve the goal set at the 2024 UN climate conference: a tripling of the installed renewable capacity by 2030. The urgent demand for power means new plants using dirty fuels such as coal are still being built, with a 4% increase in investment expected this year. 'In the face of rapid electricity demand growth and concerns linked to security of supply, such as various geopolitical risks as well as uncertainties over hydropower output, China and India are approving increasing amounts of new coal-fired power,' said the IEA report.