throbber
SAE /nternat/'ona/ C"
`
`“The society dedicated to advancing mobility engineering worldwide”
`
`FACTS
`
`Cooperative Research Program
`
`Project Summary
`Alternative Refrigerants
`
`Purpose
`With the emergence of new and uncertain worldwide
`environmental regulations governing the use of HFC
`134a in vehicle air conditioning (A/C) systems, as
`used throughout the global automotive industry, the
`supply chain was faced an extraordinary challenge.
`As changing regulations would likely cause new
`designs and systems to be adopted, this was to
`impact significantly the investment in research,
`design, development, and testing of new systems.
`
`The issue was one faced by many organizations
`making it a candidate for a joint venture research
`projects where two or more organizations pool their
`resources to study a pre-competitive technical area
`and share in the results. SAE was looked to for its
`
`Cooperative Research Program capabilities and for
`its leadership role in mobile A/C standards.
`
`Project Scope
`The full effort consisted of three research projects
`(I-MAC, CRP150, and CRP1234yf), as described
`below, to optimize current HFC 134a based
`systems and to test and evaluate new alternative
`refrigerant systems.
`
`I-MAC
`
`The I-MAC (Improved Mobile Air Conditioning)
`project was divided into three undertakings, each
`to conduct studies and testing to develop and
`
`prove out design concepts that would:
`0 Cut emissions of HFC134a in mobile A/C
`
`0
`
`systems by 50%
`Improve efficiency of HFC134a systems
`by 30%
`0 Reduce vehicle heat loads by 30%
`CRP15O
`
`The CRP 150 project investigated four viable
`alternative refrigerants to HFC134a with a Global
`
`Warming Potential of less than 150 to provide
`test results that would aid participants in future
`design and business decisions. The research and
`testing was carried out in three phases:
`0
`Toxicology and risk assessments
`0 Chemical and material compatibility
`0
`System efficiency issues
`
`CRP1234yf
`As a result of the CRP15O project findings, a new
`candidate refrigerant HFO1 234yf was developed
`and presented an alternative. This new
`refrigerant received the same toxicology and risk,
`chemical and material compatibility, and system
`efficiency testing protocols developed in the
`CRP150 project. A work-in-progress, testing of
`HFO1234yf continues through the fourth quarter
`of 2008.
`
`Participants
`Invited for participation were OEMs from the USA,
`Europe, Japan, Korea and India, air conditioning
`component suppliers, chemical manufacturers who
`supply refrigerant products and environmental
`government agencies such as the US EPA. On the
`following page is a list of participants for each
`project, I-MAC, CRP150, and CRP1234yf.
`
`Role of SAE
`
`Project management
`0 Provide a legal framework for industry
`discussion, meeting space and meeting
`facilitation
`
`0 Establish project milestones and schedules
`0 Provide oversight to ensure confidentiality of
`proprietary information
`0 Develop, execute and monitor strict non-
`disclosure agreements and procedures;
`code test results and components
`Continued
`
`1of2
`
`Arkema Exhibit 1080
`
`

`
`A|Ter'1‘i;:ati\./e Ref: ig:~::i'.;“mtss 'l':ii(fi)l‘iTl{il.l
`
`Subcontract administration
`
`Identify key testing organizations
`0
`0 Acquire proposals and bids from subcontractors
`0 Develop and administer contracts with all testing
`subcontractors; monitor deliverables and schedules
`
`Organization of funding and fiscal management
`0 Budget development
`0 Prepare required agreements to obtain funding
`0 Solicit funding among prospective participants
`0 Develop proposals for and acquire government
`funding
`0 Establish escrow accounts, account for all funding,
`and disburse project funds as required
`
`Subcontractor/Partner/Affiliate Organizations
`Testing and lab facilities
`0 Creative Thermal Solutions
`
`Delphi
`GM
`
`NREL (National Renewable Energy Labs Participants
`University of Illinois
`
`Toxicology and risk assessments
`0 Gradient Corporation
`0 US Army
`
`Chemical and materials compatibility
`0
`ILK-Dresden
`
`0 Spauschus Associates
`
`Final Deliverables
`
`Project results were delivered to participants on CD-ROM
`and through private and secure website postings. More than
`662 reports were prepared for both for common use and
`proprietary to individual companies including over 480 data
`reports, photos, and videos. Presentations were delivered
`to a broader industry audience via conferences and other
`venues including the 2007 and 2008 SAE Alternative
`Refrigerant Symposium.
`
`Budget
`0
`I-MAC: $1.76 million
`0 CRP150: $1.6 million
`
`0 CRPl234y‘l 1 $880,030
`
`Project Timelines
`0
`I-MAC: September 2004 through August 2007
`0 CRP150: September 2006 through March 2008
`0 CRP1234yf: October 2007 through fourth quarter, 2008
`
`Project Participants
`
`Air International
`Thermal
`
`Arkema
`
`Audi
`Behr
`
`Bergstrom
`BMW
`
`Chrysler LLC
`Daimler
`
`DaimlerChrysler
`
`Dayco
`Delphi
`Denso
`
`Dow
`
`DuPont
`
`Eaton
`
`FIAT Group
`Ford
`
`Freudenberg
`Fujikoki America
`General Motors
`
`Goodyear
`Honeywell
`Hutchinson
`Ineos Fluor America
`
`Japan Fluor Mfg.
`Maflow S.p.A.
`Manuli
`Modine
`Nissan
`
`Opel
`Parker Hannifin
`
`Corp.
`Porsche
`
`PSA Peugot Citreon
`Renault
`
`Sanden
`
`Sanyo
`Solvay
`Toyota
`Trelleborg Sealing
`Solutions
`U.S. EPA
`
`Valeo
`
`Viking Plastics
`Visteon
`
`Volkswagen
`Volvo
`
`-
`
`-
`
`-
`
`-
`
`-
`
`-
`
`-
`
`-
`-
`
`0
`
`-
`
`-
`
`*3,-\.E lnt~ |l‘IrIt|C‘lT-I
`
`0
`
`.
`
`7
`
`:_ 0
`
`‘
`
`2of2
`
`P81489

This document is available on Docket Alarm but you must sign up to view it.


Or .

Accessing this document will incur an additional charge of $.

After purchase, you can access this document again without charge.

Accept $ Charge
throbber

Still Working On It

This document is taking longer than usual to download. This can happen if we need to contact the court directly to obtain the document and their servers are running slowly.

Give it another minute or two to complete, and then try the refresh button.

throbber

A few More Minutes ... Still Working

It can take up to 5 minutes for us to download a document if the court servers are running slowly.

Thank you for your continued patience.

This document could not be displayed.

We could not find this document within its docket. Please go back to the docket page and check the link. If that does not work, go back to the docket and refresh it to pull the newest information.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

You need a Paid Account to view this document. Click here to change your account type.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

Set your membership status to view this document.

With a Docket Alarm membership, you'll get a whole lot more, including:

  • Up-to-date information for this case.
  • Email alerts whenever there is an update.
  • Full text search for other cases.
  • Get email alerts whenever a new case matches your search.

Become a Member

One Moment Please

The filing “” is large (MB) and is being downloaded.

Please refresh this page in a few minutes to see if the filing has been downloaded. The filing will also be emailed to you when the download completes.

Your document is on its way!

If you do not receive the document in five minutes, contact support at support@docketalarm.com.

Sealed Document

We are unable to display this document, it may be under a court ordered seal.

If you have proper credentials to access the file, you may proceed directly to the court's system using your government issued username and password.


Access Government Site

We are redirecting you
to a mobile optimized page.





Document Unreadable or Corrupt

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket

We are unable to display this document.

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket