Magnetic refrigeration for low-temperature applications
Abstract
The application of refrigeration at low temperatures ranging from production of liquid helium for medical imaging systems to cooling of infrared sensors on surveillance satellites is discussed. Cooling below about 15 K with regenerative refrigerators is difficult because of the decreasing thermal mass of the regenerator compared to that of the working material. In order to overcome this difficulty with helium gas as the working material, a heat exchanger plus a Joule-Thomson or other exponder is used. Regenerative magnetic refrigerators with magnetic solids as the working material have the same regenerator problem as gas refrigerators. This problem provides motivation for the development of nonregenerative magnetic refrigerators that span approximately 1 K to approximately 0 K. Particular emphasis is placed on high reliability and high efficiency. Calculations indicate considerable promise in this area. The principles, the potential, the problems, and the progress towards development of successful 4 to 20 K magnetic refrigerators are discussed.
- Publication:
-
3rd Cryocooler Conference
- Pub Date:
- May 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985crco.conf...20B
- Keywords:
-
- Carnot Cycle;
- Cryogenic Cooling;
- Infrared Detectors;
- Liquid Helium;
- Low Temperature;
- Magnetic Cooling;
- Refrigerating;
- Thermodynamic Cycles;
- Thermodynamic Properties;
- Engineering (General)