Design and prototyping of a large capacity high frequency pulse tube.

Author(s) : ERCOLANI E., PONCET J. M., CHARLES I., et al.

Type of article: Article

Summary

This document describes the design and the prototyping performed at CEA/SBT in partnership with AIR LIQUIDE of a high frequency large cooling power pulse tube. Driven at 58 Hz by a 7.5 kW flexure bearing pressure wave generator, this system provides a net heat lift of 210 W at 65 K. The phase shift is obtained by an inertance and a buffer volume. This type of cryogenic cooler can be used for on site gas liquefaction or drilling site and for high temperature superconductivity power device cooling (transmission lines, large generators, fault current limiters). In this paper, we focus on two essential points, the regenerator and the flow straightener. The regenerator is a key component for good performance of the pulse tube cooler. It must have a large thermal inertia, a low dead volume, a good heat transfer gas/matrix and at the same time, small pressure drop. In the present case and unlike typical moderate cooling power pulse tubes, the regenerator is very compact. However, the resulting conductive losses remain negligible compared to the cooling power targeted. The goal of the flow straightener is to avoid as much as possible any jet stream effect and to guarantee the uniformity of the velocity field at both ends of the pulse tube. Indeed multi-dimensional flow effects can significantly impact the performances of the machine. [Reprinted with permission from Elsevier. Copyright, 2008].

Details

  • Original title: Design and prototyping of a large capacity high frequency pulse tube.
  • Record ID : 2008-2387
  • Languages: English
  • Source: Cryogenics - vol. 48 - n. 9-10
  • Publication date: 2008/09

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