this post was submitted on 23 Jan 2026
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Imaging if this technology could cool a data centre.

Edit: I was not involved in this project. You are wasting your time asking me questions.

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[โ€“] Kolanaki@pawb.social 6 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (6 children)

This made me wonder how much heat/emissions are generated creating liquid nitrogen. ๐Ÿค”

You just compress the gas to make it liquid, right? But then, I guess you'd need to provide pure nitrogen and I'm not sure what the main source of that is other than the atmosphere itself. How do you separate it?

[โ€“] fullsquare@awful.systems 1 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

you can't turn a gas into liquid by compression alone if temperature is above critical point, you also need to cool it down. separation is done by fractional distillation, but the reason it's done is mostly about oxygen (medical and steelmaking among some other uses). for nitrogen it's somewhere about -150C. first air is stripped of water and carbon dioxide, then it's turned into a liquid, then it's separated into oxygen, nitrogen and argon, and some large specialized plants also separate xenon, krypton and neon

if you don't actually care for it being a liquid, there's another method called pressure swing adsorption that separates gases based on how tightly do they bind to porous surfaces under pressure. this is how medical oxygen concentrators work

making liquid nitrogen is pretty efficient these days, as in not much more energy is used than is actually needed

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