Up to now, all pulse tube refrigerators operating at the liquid helium temperature range use 4He as the working fluid. However, the lambda transition of 4He is a barrier for reaching temperatures below 2 K. Theoretical analysis in this paper shows that, using 3He, the temperature limit is below 2 K, and the efficiency of a 4 K pulse tube refrigerator can be improved significantly. A three-stage pulse tube refrigerator is constructed. A compressor with input power of 4 kW and a rotary valve are used to generate the pressure oscillations. With 4He, a minimum average temperature of 2.19 K was reached. Replacing 4He by 3He, at the same valve settings and operating parameters, the minimum average temperature goes down to 1.87 K and the cooling p...
The working fluid for the pulse tube refrigerator is Helium, which is non-toxic to humans and harmle...
Because of the absence of any moving components at the cold region, low vibration and high reliabili...
Presented at the 16th International Cryocooler Conference, held May 17-20, 2008 in Atlanta, Georgia....
Up to now, all pulse tube refrigerators operating at the liquid helium temperature range use 4He as ...
A new three-stage pulse-tube refrigerator (PTR) is developed by scaling down a previous PTR by 50%. ...
The development of a two-stage Pulse Tube Cryocooler (PTC) which produces a no-load temperature of s...
The pulse-tube refrigerator (PTR) is a rather new device for cooling down to extremely low temperatu...
Cryocoolers operating at liquid helium temperature span a number of application domains, such as coo...
Cryocoolers without moving parts at low temperatures have many advantages: there is no need for a li...
Presented at the 16th International Cryocooler Conference, held May 17-20, 2008 in Atlanta, Georgia....
This report summarizes a preliminary design study to explore the plausibility of using pulse tube re...
A single stage Pulse Tube Refrigerator has been designed, fabricated and operated with a 3kW GM type...
This paper presents a review of the pulse tube refrigerator from its inception in the mid-1960s up t...
Presented at the 16th International Cryocooler Conference, held May 17-20, 2008 in Atlanta, Georgia....
The characteristics and performance of a new class of 3He refrigerators are discussed. We introduce ...
The working fluid for the pulse tube refrigerator is Helium, which is non-toxic to humans and harmle...
Because of the absence of any moving components at the cold region, low vibration and high reliabili...
Presented at the 16th International Cryocooler Conference, held May 17-20, 2008 in Atlanta, Georgia....
Up to now, all pulse tube refrigerators operating at the liquid helium temperature range use 4He as ...
A new three-stage pulse-tube refrigerator (PTR) is developed by scaling down a previous PTR by 50%. ...
The development of a two-stage Pulse Tube Cryocooler (PTC) which produces a no-load temperature of s...
The pulse-tube refrigerator (PTR) is a rather new device for cooling down to extremely low temperatu...
Cryocoolers operating at liquid helium temperature span a number of application domains, such as coo...
Cryocoolers without moving parts at low temperatures have many advantages: there is no need for a li...
Presented at the 16th International Cryocooler Conference, held May 17-20, 2008 in Atlanta, Georgia....
This report summarizes a preliminary design study to explore the plausibility of using pulse tube re...
A single stage Pulse Tube Refrigerator has been designed, fabricated and operated with a 3kW GM type...
This paper presents a review of the pulse tube refrigerator from its inception in the mid-1960s up t...
Presented at the 16th International Cryocooler Conference, held May 17-20, 2008 in Atlanta, Georgia....
The characteristics and performance of a new class of 3He refrigerators are discussed. We introduce ...
The working fluid for the pulse tube refrigerator is Helium, which is non-toxic to humans and harmle...
Because of the absence of any moving components at the cold region, low vibration and high reliabili...
Presented at the 16th International Cryocooler Conference, held May 17-20, 2008 in Atlanta, Georgia....