Refrigeration Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Refrigeration stocks.

Refrigeration Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 21 EME Dycom's Q3 Earnings & Revenues Beat Estimates, Margins Up Y/Y
Nov 21 EME Why This 1 Growth Stock Could Be a Great Addition to Your Portfolio
Nov 21 EME Is Cementos Pacasmayo (CPAC) Outperforming Other Construction Stocks This Year?
Nov 21 EME 4 Top Stocks That Shine After New Analyst Coverage
Nov 21 HON Three Reasons Why HON is Risky and One Stock to Buy Instead
Nov 20 EME Construction Boom: Stifel's Top Picks to Ride U.S. Re-shoring Wave
Nov 20 TT Reasons Why You Should Bet on Trane Technologies Stock Now
Nov 20 MOD Here is What to Know Beyond Why Modine Manufacturing Company (MOD) is a Trending Stock
Nov 20 EMR Aspen Technology forms committee to evaluate Emerson's offer
Nov 20 TT Organic Growth: The Carolina Farm Trust and Trane Technologies
Nov 20 GTLS Pulsar Helium Agrees With NYSE's Chart Industries for Helium, CO2 Capture and Production
Nov 20 TT Trane Technologies to Present at the UBS Global Industrials and Transportation Conference
Nov 20 TT Trane Technologies to Present at the Goldman Sachs Industrials and Materials Conference
Nov 20 EME Stifel Says Now Could Be a Good Time to Buy Construction Stocks; Here Are 2 Names to Consider
Nov 20 EMR Zacks Industry Outlook Highlights Zurn Elkay, Eaton, Emerson Electric and Powell Industries
Nov 20 GTLS Pulsar Helium Signs Agreement With Chart Industries for Helium and CO2 Capture And Production
Nov 19 HON Honeywell: Activism Is Good, But I'm Not A Fan Of The Breakup
Nov 19 HON How Elliott Could Make Honeywell One Of The Hottest Industrial Stocks On The Market
Nov 19 TT Top Research Reports for Eli Lilly, PepsiCo & Morgan Stanley
Nov 19 LII Two Reasons to Like Lennox (and One Not So Much)
Refrigeration

Refrigeration is a process of removing heat from a low-temperature reservoir and transferring it to a high-temperature reservoir. The work of heat transfer is traditionally driven by mechanical means, but can also be driven by heat, magnetism, electricity, laser, or other means. Refrigeration has many applications, including, but not limited to: household refrigerators, industrial freezers, cryogenics, and air conditioning. Heat pumps may use the heat output of the refrigeration process, and also may be designed to be reversible, but are otherwise similar to air conditioning units.
Refrigeration has had a large impact on industry, lifestyle, agriculture, and settlement patterns. The idea of preserving food dates back to at least the ancient Roman and Chinese empires. However, mechanical refrigeration technology has rapidly evolved in the last century, from ice harvesting to temperature-controlled rail cars. The introduction of refrigerated rail cars contributed to the westward expansion of the United States, allowing settlement in areas that were not on main transport channels such as rivers, harbors, or valley trails. Settlements were also developing in infertile parts of the country, filled with newly discovered natural resources. These new settlement patterns sparked the building of large cities which are able to thrive in areas that were otherwise thought to be inhospitable, such as Houston, Texas, and Las Vegas, Nevada. In most developed countries, cities are heavily dependent upon refrigeration in supermarkets, in order to obtain their food for daily consumption. The increase in food sources has led to a larger concentration of agricultural sales coming from a smaller percentage of existing farms. Farms today have a much larger output per person in comparison to the late 1800s. This has resulted in new food sources available to entire populations, which has had a large impact on the nutrition of society.
As quite similar criteria shall be fulfilled by working fluids (refrigerants) applied to heat pumps, refrigeration and ORC cycles, several working fluids are applied by all these technologies. Ammonia was one of the first refrigerants. Refrigeration can be defined as "The science of providing and maintaining temperature below that of surrounding atmosphere". It means continuous extraction of heat from a body whose temperature is already below the temperature of its surroundings.

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