
The liquid, or refrigerant, used in a refrigerator evaporates at an extremely low temperature, so it can create freezing temperatures inside the refrigerator. If you place your refrigerator's refrigerant on your skin (definitely NOT a good idea), it will freeze your skin as it evaporates.
There are five basic parts to any refrigerator (or air-conditioning system):
- Compressor
- Heat-exchanging pipes - serpentine or coiled set of pipes outside the unit
- Expansion valve
- Heat-exchanging pipes - serpentine or coiled set of pipes inside the unit
- Refrigerant - liquid that evaporates inside the refrigerator to create the cold temperatures
Many industrial installations use pure ammonia as the refrigerant. Pure ammonia evaporates at -27 degrees Fahrenheit (-32 degrees Celsius).
- The compressor compresses the refrigerant gas. This raises the refrigerant's pressure and temperature (orange), so the heat-exchanging coils outside the refrigerator allow the refrigerant to dissipate the heat of pressurization.
- As it cools, the refrigerant condenses into liquid form (purple) and flows through the expansion valve.
- When it flows through the expansion valve, the liquid refrigerant is allowed to move from a high-pressure zone to a low-pressure zone, so it expands and evaporates (light blue). In evaporating, it absorbs heat, making it cold.
- The coils inside the refrigerator allow the refrigerant to absorb heat, making the inside of the refrigerator cold. The cycle then repeats.