Life test performance of a Philips rhombic-drive refrigerator with bellows seals
Abstract
In February 1979, tour Stirling cycle cryogenic refrigerators, developed by Philips Laboratories for the John Hopkins University/Applied Physics Laboratory, were launched into orbit aboard the P78-1 spacecraft. The refrigerators were designed to cool the detectors of two identical gamma-ray spectrometers to 77 K reliably for one year. Since launch, the refrigerators, still in orbit, have individually accumulated from 5,000 to over 20,000 hours of operation. As part of those efforts, a refrigerator identical to those in orbit was built, with one significant modification: flexible metal bellows between the crankcase and the working volume to prevent possible contaminants from migrating into the cold region. During the life test of the modified refrigerator, the temperature increase during the first three month run was 0.022 k/day, a negligible level. As of October 1982, the unit has accumulated over 12,300 hours of operation.
- Publication:
-
Refrig. for for Cryogenic Sensors
- Pub Date:
- December 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983rcgs.nasa..197L
- Keywords:
-
- Cryogenics;
- Gamma Ray Spectrometers;
- Mechanical Drives;
- Performance Tests;
- Refrigerators;
- Detection;
- Failure Modes;
- Life (Durability);
- Loads (Forces);
- Seals (Stoppers);
- Spacecraft Launching;
- Stirling Cycle;
- Engineering (General)