Chilling the need for diesel-powered refrigeration
Dearman Engine
The Dearman Engine Company
At fault is what industry buffs call forgotten polluters: auxiliary “donkey” engines that chill a trailer’s cargo and cumulatively emit unknown tons of carbon and pollutants each year.
A fully functional prototype is scheduled for road testing in the United Kingdom this July. If all goes as planned, Dearman says the industry might soon kick the need for donkey engines.
How It Works:
1) Factories compress air into a -321°F liquid. (Ideally, renewable energy drives this process to create a carbon-neutral, zero-emission cryogen.) The liquid air is pumped into a Dearman-refrigerated truck's storage vessel for about 62 percent the cost of diesel fuel, and a full tank provides about eight hours of operation.2) The ambient heat of cargo boils the liquid air back into a gas. The super-cold air moves through a heat exchanger, providing about two-thirds of a truck’s refrigeration capacity.
3) The pressurized air feeds into the Dearman engine to drive pistons that power fans and a compressor.
4) The compressor chills a refrigerant, which pumps to a second heat exchanger and provides the remaining one-third of refrigeration capacity. The system is estimated to harness about 40 percent of the energy used to liquefy the air as it boils into a gas—roughly the same efficiency as a diesel-fueled engine—yet it emits only cold air.
Lead inventor: Peter Dearman
Development cost to date: $8.3 million
Company: The Dearman Engine Company
Market Maturity: •••••
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