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MODELING AND EXPERIMENTS ON FAST COOLDOWN OF A 120 Hz PULSE TUBE CRYOCOOLER
Author(s) -
Srinivas Vanapalli,
Michael A. O. Lewis,
G. Grossman,
Zhihua Gan,
Ray Radebaugh,
H.J.M. ter Brake,
J. G. Weisend,
John Barclay,
Susan Breon,
Jonathan Demko,
Michael DiPirro,
J. Patrick Kelley,
Peter Kittel,
Arkadiy Klebaner,
Al Zeller,
Mark Zagarola,
Steven Van Sciver,
Andrew Rowe,
John Pfotenhauer,
Tom Peterson,
Jennifer Lock
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.177
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.2908503
Subject(s) - cryocooler , regenerative heat exchanger , pulse tube refrigerator , materials science , pulse (music) , cryogenics , tube (container) , nuclear engineering , cooling capacity , mechanics , volume (thermodynamics) , dilution refrigerator , refrigeration , refrigerator car , thermodynamics , physics , optics , heat exchanger , engineering , composite material , detector
High frequency operation of a pulse tube cryocooler leads to reduced regenerator volume, which results in a reduced heat capacity and a faster cooldown time. A pulse tube cryocooler operating at a frequency of 120 Hz and an average pressure of 3.5 MPa achieved a no-load temperature of 50 K. The cooling power at 80 K was about 3.35 W with a cooldown time from 285 K to 80 K of about 5.5 minutes, even though the additional thermal mass at the cold end due to flanges, screws, heater, and thermometer was 4.2 times that of the regenerator. This fast cooldown is about two to four times faster than that of typical pulse tube cryocoolers and is very attractive to many applications. In this study we measure the cooldown time to 80 K for different cold-end masses and extrapolate to zero cold-end mass. We also present an analytical model for the cooldown time for different cold-end masses and compare the results with the experiments. The model and the extrapolated experimental results indicate that with zero cold-end mass the cooldown time to 80 K with this 120 Hz pulse tube cryocooler would be about 32 s. © 2008 American Institute of Physics.

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