Cryocoolers: the state of the art and recent developments
Abstract
Cryocooler performance and reliability are continually improving. Consequently, they are more and more frequently implemented by physicists in their laboratory experiments or for commercial and space applications. The five kinds of cryocoolers most commonly used to provide cryogenic temperatures for various applications are the Joule-Thomson, Brayton, Stirling, Gifford-McMahon, and pulse tube cryocoolers. Many advances in all types have occurred in the past 20 years that have allowed all of them to be used for a wide variety of applications. The present state of the art and on-going developments of these cryocoolers are reviewed in this paper. In the past five years new research on these cryocoolers has offered the potential to significantly improve them and make them suitable for even more applications. The general trend of this new cryocooler research is also presented.
Contribution of NIST; not subject to copyright in the US.- Publication:
-
Journal of Physics Condensed Matter
- Pub Date:
- April 2009
- DOI:
- 10.1088/0953-8984/21/16/164219
- Bibcode:
- 2009JPCM...21p4219R