Dictionary Definition
refrigerator n : white goods in which food can be
stored at low temperatures [syn: icebox]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A household appliance used for keeping food fresh by refrigeration (short form fridge).
Synonyms
appliance that refrigerates food
- Arabic:
- Chinese: 冰箱 (bīngxiāng)
- Czech: lednice , chladnička
- Danish: køleskab
- Dutch: koelkast , ijskast , frigo
- Faroese: køliskáp
- Finnish: jääkaappi
- French: réfrigérateur
- German: Kühlschrank , Kühlraum
- Hungarian: hűtőszekrény, frizsider
- Icelandic: kæliskápur , ísskápur
- Indonesian: koelkas
- Italian: frigorifero
- Japanese: 冷蔵庫 (れいぞうこ, reizōko)
- Korean: 냉장고 (naengjanggo)
- Latvian: ledusskapis
- Lithuanian: šaldytuvas
- Marathi: शीतकपाटगृह (šītkapātgrūha)
- Polish: lodówka
- Portuguese: refrigerador , geladeira
- Russian: холодильник (xolodíl’nik)
- Sanskrit: शीतकपाटगृह (šītkapātgrūha)
- Slovak: ľadnička
- Slovene: hladilnik
- Spanish: frigorífico italbrac Spain, heladera , nevera , refrigerador , refrigeradora , frío
- Swedish: kylskåp
Extensive Definition
A refrigerator (often called a "fridge" for
short) is a cooling appliance comprising a thermally
insulated compartment and a mechanism to transfer heat from it
to the external environment, cooling the contents to a temperature
below ambient. Refrigerators are extensively used to store foods
which deteriorate at ambient temperatures; spoilage from bacterial growth and other
processes is much slower at low temperatures. A device described as
a "refrigerator" maintains a temperature a few degrees above the
freezing
point of water; a similar device which maintains a temperature
below the freezing point of water is called a "freezer". The
refrigerator is a relatively modern invention amongst kitchen
appliances. It replaced the common icebox which had been placed
outside for almost a century and a half prior, and is sometimes
still called by the original name "icebox".
Freezers keep their contents frozen. They are
used both in households and for commercial use. Most freezers
operate at around -18 °C (0 °F). Domestic
freezers can be included as a compartment in a refrigerator,
sharing the same mechanism or with a separate mechanism, or can be
standalone units. Domestic freezers are generally upright units,
resembling refrigerators, or chests, resembling upright units laid
on their backs. Many modern freezers come with an icemaker.
Commercial fridge and freezer units, which go by
many other names, were in use for almost 40 years prior to
the common home models. They used toxic ammonia gas systems, making
them unsafe for home use. Practical household refrigerators were
introduced in 1915 and gained wider acceptance in the United States
in the 1930s as prices fell and non-toxic, non-flammable synthetic
refrigerants such as
Freon or R-12
were introduced. It is notable that while 60% of households in the
US owned a refrigerator by the 1930s, it was not until
40 years later, in the 1970s, that the refrigerator
achieved a similar level of penetration in the United
Kingdom.
History of the refrigerator
Before the invention of the refrigerator, icehouses were used to provide cool storage for most of the year. Placed near freshwater lakes or packed with snow and ice during the winter, they were once very common. Using the environment to cool foodstuffs is still common today. On mountainsides run off from melting snow higher up is a convenient way to cool drinks, and during the winter months simply placing one's milk outside one's window is sufficient to greatly extend its useful life.The first known artificial refrigeration was
demonstrated by William
Cullen at the University
of Glasgow in 1748. Between 1805, when Oliver Evans
designed the first refrigeration machine that used vapor instead of
liquid, and 1902 when Willis
Haviland Carrier demonstrated the first air
conditioner, scores of inventors contributed many small
advances in cooling machinery. In 1850 or 1851, Dr. John Gorrie
demonstrated an ice maker. In 1857, Australian James
Harrison introduced vapor-compression refrigeration to the
brewing and meat packing industries. The absorption refrigerator
was invented by Baltzar
von Platen and Carl Munters in 1922, while they were still
students at the
Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm,
Sweden. It became a worldwide success and was commercialized by
Electrolux. Other pioneers included Charles
Tellier, David Boyle,
and Raoul
Pictet.
At the start of the 20th Century, about half of
households in the United States relied on melting ice (and an
icebox) to keep food
cold, while the remaining half had no cooled storage at all. The
ice used for household storage was expensive because ice had to be
cut from winter ponds (or mechanically produced), stored centrally
until needed, and delivered regularly.
In a few exceptional cases, mechanical
refrigeration systems had been adapted by the start of the 20th
century for use in the homes of the very wealthy, and might be used
for cooling both living and food storage areas. One early system
was installed at the mansion of Walter Pierce, an oil company
executive.
Marcel
Audiffren of France championed the idea of a refrigerating
machine for cooling and preserving foods at home. His U.S. patents,
issued in 1895 and 1908, were purchased by the American Audiffren
Refrigerating Machine Company. Machines based on Audiffren's
sulfur
dioxide process were manufactured by General Electric in
Fort
Wayne, Indiana and marketed by the Johns-Manville
company. The first unit was sold in 1911. Audiffren machines were
expensive, selling for about $1,000 — about twice as much as an
automobile cost at the time.
General
Electric sought to develop refrigerators of its own, and in
1915 the first Guardian unit was assembled in a back yard wash
house as a predecessor to the Frigidaire. In
1916 Kelvinator and Servel came out with two units among a field of
competing models. This number increased to 200 by 1920. In 1918,
Kelvinator had a model with automatic controls.
These home units usually required the
installation of the mechanical parts, motor and compressor, in the
basement or an adjacent room while the cold box was located in the
kitchen. There was a 1922 model that consisted of a wooden cold
box, water-cooled
compressor, an ice cube tray
and a 9 cubic foot
compartment for $714. (A 1922 Model-T Ford cost
about $450.) In 1923 Frigidaire introduced the first self-contained
unit. About this same time porcelain covered metal cabinets began
to appear. Ice cube trays were introduced more and more during the
1920s; up to this time freezing was not a function of the modern
refrigerator.
The first refrigerator to see widespread use was
the General Electric "Monitor-Top"
refrigerator introduced in 1927. The compressor assembly, which
emitted a substantial amount of heat, was placed above the cabinet,
and surrounded with a decorative ring. Over 1,000,000 units were
produced. These refrigerators used either sulfur
dioxide or methyl
formate as a refrigerant. Many units are still functional
today. The introduction of freon expanded the refrigerator
market during the 1930s, and freezer units became a little more
common and requested during the 1940s. Home units did not go into
mass production until after WWII. The 1950s and 1960s saw technical
advances like automatic defrosting and automatic ice
making. Developments of the 1970s and 80s brought about more
efficient refrigerators, and environmental issues banned the use of
CFC (freon) refrigerants used in sealed systems.
Refrigerators used to consume more energy than
any other home appliance, but in the last twenty years, great
strides have been made to make refrigerators more energy efficient.
Current models that are Energy Star
qualified use 50 percent less energy than models made before
1993.
Early refrigerator models (1916 and on) featured
a cold compartment for ice cube trays. Successful processing of
fresh vegetables through freezing began in the late 1920s by the
Postum
Company (the forerunner of General
Foods) which had acquired the technology when it bought the
rights to Clarence
Birdseye’s successful fresh freezing methods.
The first successful example of the benefits of
frozen foods occurred when General Foods heiress Marjorie
Merriweather Post (then wife of Joseph E.
Davies, United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union
) deployed commercial grade freezers to Spasso House
(US Embassy) in Moscow in advance of
the Davies’ arrival. Post, fearful of the food processing safety
observed in the USSR, then fully stocked the freezers with product
processed from General Foods Birdseye unit. The frozen food stores
allowed the Davies’ to lavishly entertain and serve fresh frozen
foods that would otherwise be out of season. Upon returning from
Moscow, Post (who resumed her maiden name after divorcing Davies)
directed General Foods to market frozen product to upscale
restaurants.
Introduction of home freezer units occurred in
the United States in 1940, and frozen foods began to make the
transition from luxury to necessity.
How a refrigerator works
Refrigerators work by the use of heat pumps operating in a refrigeration cycle. An industrial refrigerator is simply a refrigerator used in an industrial setting, usually in a restaurant or supermarket. They may consist of either a cooling compartment only (a larger refrigerator) or a freezing compartment only (a freezer) or contain both. The industry has nicknames for these units as well sometimes referring to them as a “cold box” or a “walk-in.” The dual compartment was introduced commercially by General Electric in 1939.The vapor compression cycle is used in most
household refrigerators. In this cycle, a circulating refrigerant such as freon enters the compressor as a
vapor at its boiling
point. The vapor is compressed and exits the compressor as a
superheated vapor. The superheated vapor travels through part of
the condenser which removes the superheat by cooling the vapor. The
vapor travels through the remainder of the condenser and is
condensed into a liquid at its boiling point. The saturated liquid
refrigerant passes through the expansion valve where its pressure
abruptly decreases. The decrease in pressure results in the flash
evaporation and auto-refrigeration of a portion of the liquid
(typically, less than half of the liquid flashes). The cold and
partially vaporized refrigerant travels through the coil or tubes
in the evaporator. There, a fan circulates room air across the coil
or tubes, and the refrigerant is totally vaporized, extracting heat
from the air which is then returned to the food compartment. The
refrigerant vapor returns to the compressor inlet to complete the
thermodynamic
cycle.
An absorption
refrigerator works differently from a compressor refrigerator,
using a source of heat, and
typically runs more quietly.
The Peltier
effect uses electricity directly to pump heat; refrigerators
using this effect are sometimes used for camping, or where noise is
not acceptable. They are totally silent, but less energy-efficient
than other methods.
Other alternatives to the vapor-compression cycle
but not in current use include thermionic, vortex tube,
air cycle, magnetic cooling, Stirling
cycle, Malone refrigeration, acoustic cooling, pulse tube and
water cycle systems.
Types of domestic refrigerators
Domestic refrigerators and freezers for food storage are made in a range of sizes. Amongst the smallest is a 4 L Peltier fridge advertised as being able to hold 6 cans of beer. A large domestic fridge stands as tall as a person and may be about 1 m wide with a capacity of 600 L. Some models for small households fit under kitchen work surfaces, usually about 86 cm high. Fridges may be combined with freezers, either stacked with fridge or freezer above, below, or side by side. A fridge without a true freezer may have a small compartment to make ice. Freezers may have drawers to store food in, or they may have no divisions (chest freezers).Fridges and freezers may be free-standing, or
built into a kitchen.
Compressor refrigerators are by far the most
common type; they make a noticeable noise. Absorption or Peltier
units are used where quiet running is required; Peltier coolers are
used in the smallest refrigerators as they have no bulky
mechanism.
Compressor and Peltier refrigerators are
invariably powered by electricity; absorption units can in
principle be designed to be powered by any heat source. Gas-only
and dual power gas/electricity units are available.
Refrigeration units for commercial and for
non-food use are made in a huge range of sizes and styles.
Many Koreans store
kimchi in a kimchi
refrigerator (hangul: 김치냉장고) that is specifically designed with
precise controls to keep different varieties of kimchi at optimal
temperatures for various stages of fermentation and also for longer
storage than in regular refrigerators.
Impact on lifestyle
The invention of the refrigerator has allowed the modern family to purchase, store, freeze, prepare and preserve food products in a fresh state for much longer periods of time than was previously possible. For the majority of families without a sizeable garden in which to grow vegetables and raise livestock, the advent of the refrigerator along with the modern supermarket led to a vastly more varied diet and improved health resulting from improved nutrition. Dairy products, meats, fish, poultry and vegetables can all be kept refrigerated in the same space within the kitchen (although raw meat should be kept separate from other foodstuffs for reasons of hygiene).The refrigerator allows families to consume more
salads, fresh fruits and vegetables during meals without having to
own a garden or an orchard. Exotic foodstuffs from far-off
countries that have been imported by means of refrigeration can be
enjoyed in the home because of the availability of domestic
refrigeration.
The luxury of freezing allows households to
purchase more foods in bulk that can be eaten at leisure while the
bulk purchase provides cost savings (see economies
of scale). Ice cream, a
popular commodity of the 20th century, was previously only
available by traveling long distances to where the product was made
fresh and had to be eaten on the spot. Now it is a practically
ubiquitous food item. Ice on-demand not only adds to the enjoyment
of cold drinks, but is useful in first-aid
applications, not to mention cold packs that can be kept frozen for
picnics or in case of emergency.
Features
Newer refrigerators may include:
- Frost-free refrigeration;
- A power failure warning, alerting the user by flashing a temperature display. The maximum temperature reached during the power failure may be displayed, along with information on whether the frozen food has defrosted or may contain harmful bacteria;
- Chilled water and ice available from an in-door station, so the door need not be opened;
- Cabinet rollers that allow the refigerator to be easily rolled around for easier cleaning;
- Adjustable shelves and trays that can be moved around to suit the user;
- A Status Indicator to notify the user when it is time to change the water filter;
- An in-door ice caddy, which relocates the ice-maker storage to the freezer door and saves approximately 60 litres (about 2 cubic feet) of usable freezer space. It is also removable, and helps to prevent ice-maker clogging;
- A cooling zone in the refrigerator door shelves. Air from the freezer section is diverted to the refrigerator door, to better cool milk or juice stored in the door shelf;
- Extras unrelated to refrigeration, such as a television set, radio, or DVD player built into a door.
Early freezer units accumulated ice crystals
around the freezing units. This was a result of humidity introduced
into the units when the doors to the freezer were opened. This
build up of frost required periodic thawing of the units to
maintain their efficiency. Advances in frost-free refrigeration
eliminating the thawing task were introduced in the 1950s. Also,
early units featured freezer compartments located within the larger
refrigerator, and accessed by opening the refrigerator door, and
then the smaller internal freezer door; units featuring entirely
separate freezer compartment were introduced in the early 1960s,
becoming the industry standard by the middle of that decade.
Later advances included automatic ice units and
self compartmentalized freezing units.
An increasingly important environmental concern
is the disposal of old refrigerators - initially because of the
freon coolant damaging the ozone layer,
but as the older generation of refrigerators disappears it is the
destruction of CFC-bearing insulation which causes concern. Modern
refrigerators usually use a refrigerant called HFC-134a
(1,2,2,2-tetrafluoroethane), which has no ozone layer depleting
properties, instead of freon.
Disposal of discarded refrigerators is regulated,
often mandating the removal of doors: children playing
hide-and-seek have been asphyxiated while hiding inside a discarded
refrigerator. This was particularly true for the older models that
had latching doors. More modern units use a magnetic door gasket to
hold the door sealed but can actually be pushed open from the
inside. However, children can be unwittingly harmed by hiding
inside any discarded refrigerator.
Temperature zones and ratings
Some refrigerators are now divided into four
zones to store different types of food:
- -18 °C (0 °F) (freezer)
- 0 °C (32 °F) (meats)
- 5 °C (40 °F) (refrigerator)
- 10 °C (50 °F) (vegetables)
The capacity of a refrigerator is measured in
either litres or cubic feet (US). Typically the volume of a
combined fridge-freezer is split to 100 litres (3.53 cubic feet)
for the freezer and 140 litres (4.94 cubic feet) for the
refrigerator, although these values are highly variable.
Temperature settings for refrigerator and freezer
compartments are often given arbitrary numbers (for example, 1
through 9, warmest to coldest) by manufacturers, but generally 2 to
8 °C (36 to 46 °F) is ideal for the refrigerator compartment and
-18 °C (0 °F) for the freezer. Some refrigerators require a certain
external temperature (60 °F) to run properly. This can be an issue
when placing a refrigerator in an unfinished area such as a
garage.
European freezers,
and refrigerators with a freezer compartment, have a four star
rating system to grade freezers.
- * : max temperature = -6°C. Maximum storage time for frozen food is 1 week
- ** : max temperature = -12°C. Maximum storage time for frozen food is 1 month
- *** : max temperature = -18°C. Maximum storage time for frozen food is 3 months
- *(***) : max temperature = -18°C. Maximum storage time for frozen food is up to 12 months
Although both the three and four star ratings
specify the same maximum temperature of -18°C, only a four star
freezer is intended to be used for freezing fresh food. Three (or
fewer) stars are used for frozen food compartments which are only
suitable for storing frozen food; introducing fresh food into such
a compartment is likely to result in unacceptable temperature
rises.
Notes and references
External links
- Refrigeration History
- The History of the Refrigerator and Freezers
- href="http://www.cam.net.uk/home/StKilda/electrolux.htmll">http://www.cam.net.uk/home/StKilda/electrolux.htmll How does a gas-powered fridge actually work (without compressor - using heater to power the heat transfer cycle) Archived Page
- How Refrigerators Work Article by HowStuffWorks
- Refrigerators, Canada Science and Technology Museum
- How Refrigerators Work and What goes wrong with them Article by Apwagner.com
refrigerator in Arabic: ثلاجة
refrigerator in Bulgarian: Хладилник
refrigerator in Catalan: Frigorífic
refrigerator in Czech: Lednička
refrigerator in Danish: Køleskab
refrigerator in German: Kühlschrank
refrigerator in Spanish: Frigorífico
(electrodoméstico)
refrigerator in Esperanto: Frostujo
refrigerator in French: Réfrigérateur
refrigerator in Korean: 냉장고
refrigerator in Indonesian: Kulkas
refrigerator in Italian: Frigorifero
refrigerator in Hebrew: מקרר
refrigerator in Georgian: მაცივარი
refrigerator in Malay (macrolanguage): Peti
sejuk
refrigerator in Dutch: Koelkast
refrigerator in Japanese: 冷蔵庫
refrigerator in Chechen: ГIорошъерг
refrigerator in Norwegian: Kjøleskap
refrigerator in Uighur: توڭلاتقۇ
refrigerator in Polish: Chłodziarka
refrigerator in Portuguese: Frigorífico
(eletrodoméstico)
refrigerator in Russian: Холодильник
refrigerator in Finnish: Jääkaappi
refrigerator in Swedish: Kylskåp
refrigerator in Turkish: Buzdolabı
refrigerator in Urdu: سردخانہ
refrigerator in Yiddish: פרידזשידער
refrigerator in Contenese: 雪櫃
refrigerator in Chinese: 冰箱