R-22 is a colorless gas that is used as a propellant and refrigerant. The technical name for this gas is chlorodifluoromethane.
The terms in row 22 are 22Cr where r = 0, 1, 2, ..., 22. 22Cr = 22!/[r!*(22-r)!] where r! = r*(r-1)*...*3*2*1 and 0! = 1
22/7*D (or) 22/7*R*R
R-22 has HCFC (hydrocloroflorocarbons) R-410A has HFC (hydroflorocarbons)
We R Who We R was created on 2010-10-22.
yes
"Freon" is DuPont's trademark for its CFC refrigerant products. R-22 is one of those refrigerants, so R-22 and Freon-22 are the same refrigerant.
R-22 is still available, because of this there is no need for a drop in. So there is none.
The R-22 (chlorodifluoromethane), will leak from a smaller hole than R-410A will. Sort of. Now that we've answered the question, it's time to state that R-410A is an azeotropic mixture of difluoromethane and pentafluoroethane. And the difluoromethane component of the mixture is a smaller molecule than chlorodifluoromethane, which is what R-22 is. But the pentafluoroethane is a larger molecule than the chlorodifluoromethane (R-22). If molecular size is the sole determinate as to which "stuff" can get out, part of the R-410A can get out a smaller hole than the R-22, but all of the R-22 can get out through the "right sized hole" because it is smaller than a constituent of the R-410A. It's your call. Links are provided.
R-22 is a colorless gas that is used as a propellant and refrigerant. The technical name for this gas is chlorodifluoromethane.
It is 22 + R
No
R-22 is the refrigerant that contains CFC (chlorofluorocarbon). R-134a does not contain CFCs but is considered an HFC (hydrofluorocarbon) refrigerant. R-500 contains a mixture of CFC-12 and CFC-22. R-123 is a halocarbon refrigerant but does not contain CFCs specifically.