Application domains and possible substitutes
Fluorinated greenhouse gases include partly fluorinated hydrocarbons (HFC), fully fluorinated hydrocarbons (PFC), sulphur hexafluoride (SF6), and nitrogen trifluoride (NF3).
HFCs are mainly used in closed systems (e.g. as refrigerants), in open systems (e.g. as propellants), and as process gas e.g. for semiconductor manufacturing. Please use the navigation on the right hand side for further information on their use in supermarkets, heat pumps, building air-conditioning, mobile air conditioning in cars, buses, and railway vehicles.
PFCs are mainly used as an etching gas for semiconductor manufacturing; they also originate as byproducts of aluminum manufacturing.
SF6 has been in use since the late 1960s for myriad purposes such as a soundproofing gas in insulating glass, as an insulation and extinguishing gas in electrical equipment, and as a protective gas for magnesium casting.
Emission data and emission projections can be found here.
Halogen-free alternatives are used in many of the above-mentioned applications such as solvents, cleaning agents, refrigerants, fire extinguishing agents and for numerous foam product applications. It is only in recent years that certain processes and products that use halogen-free substances have reached an ecologically and economically acceptable state of technical advancement. This applies to the use of CO2 as a refrigerant and to halogen-free blowing agents for foam products. These technologies are now poised to replace the fluorinated gas-based products and processes.
Within the framework of the Advisory Assistance Programme (AAP), other countries, such as Bulgaria or the Ukraine, are supported with advice on the introduction of alternatives. More information can be found in the AAP database.