How Does a Refrigerant Aerosol Filling System Work? Step-by-Step Process Guide

How Does a Refrigerant Aerosol Filling System Work? Step-by-Step Process Guide

Looking to understand the refrigerant filling system process? At ZNZ Machinery, we design, build, and install aerosol filling lines for refrigerant manufacturers worldwide. Call +86 17603714134 for a detailed process consultation and equipment proposal.

How Does the Aerosol Refrigerant Filling Process Work?

A refrigerant aerosol filling system transforms empty can bodies into sealed, pressurized products through a carefully controlled sequence of six operations. Each step must maintain precise pressure, vacuum, and cleanliness standards to ensure a leak-free, compliant final product.

Below is the complete refrigerant can filling process from start to finish.

Step 1: Can Feeding & Inspection

  • Empty aerosol cans are loaded into the filling line via automatic depalletizer or manual feeding hopper
  • Each can passes through a presence sensor and orientation check
  • Rejects are diverted before processing begins
  • Typically 1,000–6,000 cans per hour depending on the type of refrigerant can filling equipment installed

Step 2: Vacuum Purge & Air Removal

  • A deep vacuum (-950 mbar or below) removes oxygen and moisture from the can interior
  • This prevents chemical reactions between residual air and the refrigerant
  • Vacuum holding time: 1–3 seconds depending on can size
  • Some systems perform a nitrogen pre-purge before vacuum for additional safety

Step 3: Liquid Refrigerant Filling

  • Liquid refrigerant is metered into the can via a precision piston or magnetic flowmeter dosing system
  • Fill accuracy: ±1 g for most commercial systems
  • Filling pressure is maintained below the refrigerant’s vapor pressure to prevent flashing
  • Typical fill volumes: 100 g to 1,000 g depending on can size and application

Step 4: Gas Dosing (Propellant or Top-Up Gas)

  • Additional propellant gas (e.g., R-152a, butane, or compressed air) is dosed to achieve target pressure
  • The aerosol gas dosing system uses high-precision flow controllers with ±0.5 g accuracy
  • Dosing pressure is regulated based on the target can pressure at 25 °C
  • This step is critical for achieving consistent spray performance across production batches

Step 5: Valve Insertion & Crimping

  • The aerosol valve is placed onto the can opening
  • A hydraulic or pneumatic crimping head applies controlled force to seal the valve to the can rim
  • Crimping parameters (force: 500–2,000 N, depth: 0.3–0.5 mm) are monitored in real time
  • Proper crimping and sealing determines whether the can will hold pressure for its intended shelf life
  • See our troubleshooting guide on why refrigerant aerosol cans leak after filling

Step 6: Leak Detection & Weighing

  • Every filled can passes through a leak test station (water bath or electronic pressure decay method)
  • Dedicated leak testing for refrigerant cans detects leaks as small as 0.1 g/year
  • Cans are then weighed on a dynamic checkweigher to verify fill weight compliance
  • Rejected cans are automatically diverted for rework or disposal

Pressure Control During Filling

StageTarget PressureControl Method
Vacuum purge-950 mbarVacuum pump + gauge
Liquid filling2–8 barRegulated refrigerant reservoir
Gas dosing3–12 barPrecision pressure regulator + flow meter
Crimping500–2,000 NHydraulic or pneumatic actuator with force sensor
Leak testing10–15 bar (immersion)Compressed air or water bath

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does the complete filling cycle take?

On a modern fully automatic line, the entire cycle from can feed to leak test takes 3–6 seconds per can. Semi-automatic lines run at 6–15 seconds per cycle.

What safety measures are built into the filling process?

Modern systems include explosion-proof electrical enclosures, gas detectors, emergency stops, and nitrogen inerting. Read about 5 key safety features in explosion-proof filling machines.

Can the same machine fill different refrigerants?

Yes, with proper purging between product changeovers. Multi-product lines require additional gas detection and cleaning cycles to prevent cross-contamination.

What is the most common cause of filling defects?

Inconsistent vacuum levels and improper crimping force account for over 70% of rejected cans on refrigerant filling lines.

Get a Custom Refrigerant Aerosol Filling System Quote

ZNZ Machinery provides complete turnkey solutions for refrigerant can filling — from single stations to integrated production lines. Call +86 17603714134 to speak with our engineering team.

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