,
Pennsylvania, 1926
Technology development Ancient origins Ancient Iranians were among the first to invent a form of cooler utilizing the principles of evaporative cooling and radiative cooling called
yakhchāls. These complexes used subterranean storage spaces, a large thickly insulated above-ground domed structure, and outfitted with
badgirs (wind-catchers) and series of
qanats (aqueducts).
Pre-electric refrigeration In modern times, before the invention of the modern electric refrigerator,
icehouses and
iceboxes 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. Natural means are still used to cool foods today. On mountainsides, runoff from melting snow is a convenient way to cool drinks, and during the winter one can keep milk fresh much longer just by keeping it outdoors. The word "refrigeratory" was used at least as early as the 17th century.
Artificial refrigeration The history of artificial refrigeration began when Scottish professor
William Cullen designed a small refrigerating machine in 1755. Cullen used a pump to create a partial
vacuum over a container of
diethyl ether, which then
boiled, absorbing
heat from the surrounding air. The experiment even created a small amount of ice, but had no practical application at that time. 's 1895 patent for the
refrigeration cycle In 1805, American inventor
Oliver Evans described a closed
vapor-compression refrigeration cycle for the production of ice by ether under vacuum. In 1820, the British scientist
Michael Faraday liquefied
ammonia and other gases by using high pressures and low temperatures, and in 1834, an American expatriate in Great Britain,
Jacob Perkins, built the first working vapor-compression refrigeration system. It was a closed-cycle device that could operate continuously. A similar attempt was made in 1842, by American physician,
John Gorrie, who built a working prototype, but it was a commercial failure. American engineer
Alexander Twining took out a British patent in 1850 for a vapor compression system that used ether. The first practical vapor compression refrigeration system was built by
James Harrison, a Scotsman. His 1856 patent was for a vapor compression system using ether, alcohol or ammonia. He built a mechanical ice-making machine in 1851 on the banks of the Barwon River at Rocky Point in
Geelong,
Victoria, and his first commercial ice-making machine followed in 1854. Harrison also introduced commercial vapor-compression refrigeration to breweries and meat packing houses, and by 1861, a dozen of his systems were in operation. The first
gas absorption refrigeration system (compressor-less and powered by a heat-source) was developed by Edward Toussaint of France in 1859 and patented in 1860. It used gaseous ammonia dissolved in water ("aqua ammonia").
Carl von Linde, an engineering professor at the
Technical University of Munich in Germany, patented an improved method of liquefying gases in 1876, creating the first reliable and efficient compressed-ammonia refrigerator. His new process made possible the use of gases such as
ammonia (NH3),
sulfur dioxide (SO2) and
methyl chloride (CH3Cl) as refrigerants, which were widely used for that purpose until the late 1920s despite safety concerns. In 1895 he discovered the
refrigeration cycle.
Electric refrigerators In 1894,
Hungarian inventor and industrialist István Röck started to manufacture a large industrial ammonia refrigerator which was powered by electric compressors (together with the Esslingen Machine Works). Its electric compressors were manufactured by the
Ganz Works. At the 1896 Millennium Exhibition, Röck and the Esslingen Machine Works presented a 6-tonne capacity artificial ice producing plant. In 1906, the first large Hungarian cold store (with a capacity of 3,000 tonnes, the largest in Europe) opened in Tóth Kálmán Street, Budapest, the machine was manufactured by the
Ganz Works. Until nationalisation after the Second World War, large-scale industrial refrigerator production in Hungary was in the hands of Röck and Ganz Works. Commercial refrigerator and freezer units, which go by many other names, were in use for almost 40 years prior to the common home models. They used gas systems such as
ammonia (R-717) or
sulfur dioxide (R-764), which occasionally leaked, 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-12 (R-12) were introduced. However, R-12 proved to be damaging to the
ozone layer, causing governments to issue a ban on its use in new refrigerators and air-conditioning systems in 1994. The less harmful replacement for R-12,
R-134a (tetrafluoroethane), has been in common use since 1990, but R-12 is still found in many old systems. Refrigeration, continually operated, typically consumes up to 50% of the energy used by a supermarket. Doors, made of glass to allow inspection of contents, improve efficiency significantly over open display cases, which use 1.3 times the energy.
Residential refrigerators In 1913, the first electric refrigerators for home and domestic use were invented and produced by Fred W. Wolf of Fort Wayne, Indiana, with models consisting of a unit that was mounted on top of an ice box. His first device, produced over the next few years in several hundred units, was called
DOMELRE. In 1914, engineer
Nathaniel B. Wales of Detroit, Michigan, introduced an idea for a practical electric refrigeration unit, which later became the basis for the
Kelvinator. A self-contained refrigerator, with a compressor on the bottom of the cabinet was invented by
Alfred Mellowes in 1916. Mellowes produced this refrigerator commercially but was bought out by
William C. Durant in 1918, who started the
Frigidaire company to
mass-produce refrigerators. In 1918, Kelvinator company introduced the first refrigerator with any type of automatic control. The
absorption refrigerator was invented by
Baltzar von Platen and
Carl Munters from Sweden in 1922, while they were still students at the
Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm. It became a worldwide success and was commercialized by
Electrolux. Other pioneers included
Charles Tellier, David Boyle, and
Raoul Pictet.
Carl von Linde was the first to patent and make a practical and compact refrigerator. 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 compartment, and cost $714. (A 1922
Model-T Ford cost about $476.) By 1923, Kelvinator held 80 percent of the market for electric refrigerators. Also 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 an auxiliary function of the modern refrigerator. The first refrigerator to see widespread use was the General Electric "Monitor-Top" refrigerator introduced in 1927, so-called, by the public, because of its resemblance to the gun turret on the ironclad warship
USS Monitor of the 1860s. The compressor assembly, which emitted a great deal of heat, was placed above the cabinet, and enclosed by a decorative ring. Over a million units were produced. As the refrigerating medium, these refrigerators used either
sulfur dioxide, which is corrosive to the eyes and may cause loss of vision, painful skin burns and lesions, or
methyl formate, which is highly flammable, harmful to the eyes, and toxic if inhaled or ingested. The introduction of
Freon in the 1920s expanded the refrigerator market during the 1930s and provided a safer, low-toxicity alternative to previously used refrigerants. Separate freezers became common during the 1940s; the term for the unit, popular at the time, was
deep freeze. These devices, or
appliances, did not go into mass production for use in the home until after World War II. The 1950s and 1960s saw technical advances like
automatic defrosting and automatic ice making. More efficient refrigerators were developed in the 1970s and 1980s, even though
environmental issues led to the banning of very effective (Freon) refrigerants. Early refrigerator models (from 1916) had a cold compartment for ice cube trays. From the late 1920s fresh vegetables were successfully processed through freezing 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. == Styles ==