Hydride absorption refrigerator system for ten Kelvin and below
Abstract
A very long-life, lightweight and efficient hydride absorption refrigerator system was built to operate at ten Kelvin and below. The system consists of four basic stages of refrigeration. The first stage is accomplished by an active refrigeration system. The second stage is operated by a hydride absorption system, wherein a heated hydride powder drives off high pressure hydrogen through a Joule-Thomson/heat exchanger expansion loop such that the hydrogen is partially liquefied. In the third stage, the vapor pressure over the collected liquid hydrogen is lowered by absorbing the hydrogen vapor onto a different low pressure, worn hydride. With a 1.7 torr partial pressure of hydrogen gas in the hydride, liquid hydrogen is solidified and sublimes at 10 K. Long-life adiabatic demagnetization refrigerators, helium desorption, or helium diaphragm compressors are used to cool to 4 K or below. It is shown that the hydride concepts provide an extremely efficient means of refrigeration to 10 K, and that an entire sorption refrigeration process can be accomplished solely by using low grade heat energy at about 150 C.
- Publication:
-
3rd Cryocooler Conference
- Pub Date:
- May 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985crco.conf...53J
- Keywords:
-
- Absorption;
- Adiabatic Demagnetization Cooling;
- Adsorption;
- Cryogenic Cooling;
- Refrigerating;
- Sublimation;
- Cryogenics;
- Hydrides;
- Hydrogen Production;
- Magnetic Cooling;
- Magnetohydrodynamic Flow;
- Engineering (General)