A 10 deg K triple-expansion Stirling-cycle cryocooler
Abstract
The design of a triple expansion closed cycle Stirling cryocooler optimized for a cooling load of 50 mW at 10 K is described. The cooler was designed with the objectives of low power, low weight, compactness, low mechanical motion, low electromagnetic noise, and low output temperature fluctuations. The design employs a direct drive linear motion piston motor and a triple expansion free displacer. Piston motion is controlled by feedback from an optical position transducer. Mechanical vibrations are attenuated with a passive resonant counterbalance. Electromagnetic noise is attenuated with layered high permeability magnetic shielding. The regenerators move with the displacer within a thin titanium cold finger. The piston and displacer oscillate at 8.33 Hz on bearings and seals of reinforced Teflon. The cooler is designed to provide the desired 50 mW of cooling at 10 K with a power input of less than 100 W. The piston can be driven at a greater stroke to produce up to 200 mW of cooling with an input power of 250 W. A lead and copper cold tip heat exchanger will limit temperature fluctuations to within 0.01 K.
- Publication:
-
Refrig. for for Cryogenic Sensors
- Pub Date:
- December 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983rcgs.nasa..141N
- Keywords:
-
- Cryogenic Cooling;
- Refrigerators;
- Stirling Cycle;
- Design Analysis;
- Electromagnetic Interference;
- Heat Exchangers;
- Optimization;
- Pistons;
- Vibration Damping;
- Engineering (General)