Today I went and bought some bottles of propane/butane mix (70%/30%), which I'm going to use for brazing, and I'm also planning on using it as a refrigerant.
As far as I've understood, using a low-pressure gas, will help in condensing a higher-pressure gas, and therefore allowing me to use a weaker compressor and a smaller condensor, than if I only used the higher-pressure gas.
Now, the butane has a boiling point of only -0.5C, whilst, the propane boils at -42C. Do you guys think using butane as an auxiliary condenser (proper term?) for propane will help much?
I've also found this mix of propane, butane and isobutane (or, since this is VPCC: R290/R600/R600a). I don't know the percentages here, but I at least know the isobutane boils at -10C. Would this be a better mix?






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. That's the main probleme people who make 3-stages cascade with ethylen-ethylen have : ethylen can condense in the second stage, and the HX2-temp is under -80°, a this temperature the ethylen doesn't need >5bar to condense and so you just get a little mass condensed, and you have to use big compressors with high displacement and flowrate to carry any load. You'll get the same problem here, you should ever be >8bar on discharge pressure, compressors are designed that for, propan condense very easily and such gases as R12-R600a are used with passiv condensers as the ambiant temperature is around 45° and then the system work properly
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or just make slhx before separator and that`s it.


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