This invention relates to the field of equipment and installations for measurement and imagery using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), in particular the NMR techniques called LT MAS (Low Temperature Magic Angle Spinning—rotation at a magic angle and at low temperature).
More particularly, the invention has as its object a device for supplying cold gases to an NMR apparatus or installation of the above-mentioned type, as well as a corresponding installation.
Certain measuring probes of the LT MAS NMR type operate with very cold gases at temperatures that are close to liquid nitrogen (77.3 K). These gases ensure the lift and the spinning of the sample that is generally contained in a small tube called a rotor that is inserted in a stator, but also the cooling of this sample.
For this purpose, three separate gaseous streams are used, and said gaseous streams are generally designated by: “VT” (gas for cooling the sample), “Bearing” (bearing), and “Drive” (drive). These gases traditionally have pressures of 1 to 4 bar, and typical flow rates vary from 20 to 60 NI/minute. The pressure and the flow rate depend on the speed of rotation of the sample that is programmed by the user.
Usually, these above-mentioned gases, coming from a pressurized cylinder, of from a supply tank, are cooled by passing into three exchangers (one per gas) contained in three pressurized chambers that are partially filled with liquid nitrogen. The internal pressure of each chamber is regulated and kept constant by an electronic controller. The controller regulates the internal pressure of the chambers by controlling the heating power of heating resistors immersed in the liquid nitrogen of the chambers.
At constant pressure, the boiling liquid nitrogen in the chamber is in equilibrium with its vapor and it means that the temperature of the liquid nitrogen is constant. In this way, the temperature of the liquid nitrogen of each chamber is controlled. For a stable rotation of the MAS rotor, it is essential to provide dry gases that do not contain liquefied gases.
This mechanical unit that consists of these three exchangers constitutes a cold-gas supply device, commonly called an LT MAS cooling device.
An example of such a device is described in the document FR-A-2 926 629.
These known cooling devices operate perfectly, but have the drawback of consuming an excessive quantity of liquid nitrogen.
Thus, the consumption can reach 20 l/hour, or 480 liters per day, at high spinning rates. The total consumption of liquid nitrogen is directly proportional to the internal pressure of chambers containing the exchangers.
However, the pressure of each chamber is depending on the speed of rotation of the rotor. A high spinning rate is obtained with higher gas flows, in particular for the “Drive” and “Bearing” gases and the gas pressure drop in the gas exchangers tubings increases. Consequently the pressure setpoint of the chambers must be increased as well. The heat exchange surfaces of the chambers are sized to be able to evacuate the maximum thermal power.
Quite obviously, a significant consumption of liquid nitrogen involves a significant increase of the operating cost of the installation and requires frequent manipulation of tanks of liquid nitrogen by the user. To ensure a continuous operation of the device 24/24 hours, the user must typically install twice a day a full 2001 LN2 tank. This tank is used to refill and keep the level constant in the tank containing the chambers equipped with the exchangers.
Although the document FR-A-2 926 692 mentions a possibility of pre-cooling, only the exploitation of the boil off gas of the tank is mentioned, and no practical functional detail or design detail is provided. This invention has as its object to overcome the above-mentioned drawbacks by proposing an optimized solution that makes it possible to reduce significantly the consumption of liquid nitrogen in the above-mentioned devices, while taking into account specific features of the different gaseous streams in question.
For this purpose, the invention has as its object a device for supplying cold gases to an NMR installation or analytical apparatus that is equipped with a measuring probe, with said cold gases ensuring the cooling of the sample that is contained in the probe, but also its lift and rotation,
Said supply device essentially comprising an insulated tank containing liquid gas at boiling point and in which are arranged exchangers through which gas streams that are to be cooled pass, with these exchangers being connected to one or more transfer lines channeling the cooled gases to the probe,
Said device also comprising at least one additional exchanger that ensures a pre-cooling of the gas stream in question before it is channeled to the corresponding exchanger, with said or each additional exchanger is a double-flow exchanger,
Device that is characterized in that upstream relative to the gaseous stream in question, an additional pre-cooling exchanger, supplied either by the gaseous vapor produced by the boiling of the liquid gas in the tank or by the cold gas that escapes at the probe, is combined with each exchanger,
In that the additional exchanger that ensures the pre-cooling of the gas that is intended to cool the sample is supplied with gaseous vapor that is produced by the boiling of the liquid gas in the tank, and
In that the additional exchangers that ensure the pre-cooling of the cold gases intended to ensure respectively the lift and the rotation of the sample are supplied by the gases that are evacuated or that escape at the probe.
The invention will be better understood thanks to the description below, which relates to preferred embodiments, provided by way of nonlimiting examples and explained with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings, in which:
In accordance with the invention, this device 1 also comprises at least one additional exchanger 8, 8′, 8″ that ensures a pre-cooling of the gas stream in question before it is channeled to the corresponding exchanger 6, 6′, 6″, whereby said or each additional exchanger 8, 8′, 8″ comes in the form of a double-flow (or counter-current) exchanger that is supplied either by the gaseous vapor 5′ produced by the boiling of the liquid gas 5 in the tank 4 or by the cold gas 9 that is evacuated outside of the probe or that escapes at the probe 3.
The invention thus makes it possible to use the cooling capacity of the cold gases not currently used and usually directly evacuated into the atmosphere. The pre-cooling that results from the gas in question brings about a reduction of the thermal power to be transferred by the corresponding exchanger 6, 6′, 6″ and therefore a reduction of the refrigeration requirement by liquid nitrogen 5 (in which the exchangers 6, 6′, 6″ are arranged, in general inside of the temperature- and pressure-controlled chambers 6′″).
This basic concept of the invention is preferably applied to the three cold gases.
Thus, according to the invention, it is provided that upstream relative to the gaseous stream in question, an additional pre-cooling exchanger 8, 8′, 8″, as
Also in accordance with the invention, the additional exchanger 8 that ensures the pre-cooling of the cold gas that is intended to cool the sample 3′ is supplied with gaseous vapor 5′ that is produced by the boiling of the liquid gas 5 in the tank 4, and the additional exchangers 8′ and 8″ that ensure the pre-cooling of the cold gases that are intended to ensure respectively the lift and rotation of the sample 3′ are supplied by the gases 9 that are evacuated or that escape at the probe 3.
The supplying of dry gases for the lift and rotation of the probe 3 is thus ensured even after an extended shutdown of the installation 2 (because of the interdependence between the gas flows 9 and the lift and rotation gases as explained below).
In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, ensuring an effective heat transfer and as shown in
For the purpose of ensuring an optimal exploitation of the refrigerating power of the gaseous vapors 5′ and exhaust gases 9, with a gradual pre-cooling, each additional exchanger 8, 8′, 8″ is advantageously a counter-current exchanger or an opposed-stream exchanger.
According to an advantageous design variant of the invention, as shown in
As
A nonlimiting, practical embodiment will now be described in detail and in relation to
As indicated above, the purpose of the invention is to reduce the consumption of liquid gas (generally nitrogen) in the NMR installations, in particular those that use LT MAS probes, and for this purpose, the general means used consists in pre-cooling all of the MAS gases before making them pass into the different exchangers 6, 6′, 6″.
For this purpose, the invention exploits the until now unused cooling power of all of the cold gases produced during the operation of the supply device 1 and the NMR probe 3.
In the current installations, two sources of easily exploitable cold gases have been identified by the inventor:
1) During the operation of the supply device 1, a boiling of the liquid nitrogen 5 occurs permanently in the main tank 4, caused by the cooling of the MAS gases in the chambers 6′″ and the heat transfer toward the outside of these chambers. This very cold gas (nitrogen) is commonly called “boil-off.” It is not used in the current design of these cooling devices, and it is simply discharged into the atmosphere by tubes that protrude on the top of the devices.
2) In the LT MAS NMR probe, the cold gases “VT,” “Bearing,” and “Drive” leaving the stator 3″ are mixed in the inner volume of the probe 3. The resulting cold gas mixture is discharged outside of the probe into the atmosphere by an exhaust pipe that protrudes from the probe base. The envelope that constitutes the outer envelope 2′ of the probe is well insulated thermally, and consequently, the exhaust gas remains at a low temperature. The temperature of the gas at the outlet, simply evacuated into the air currently, can be between 120 to 140K in continuous operation.
As
In its preferred embodiment, the invention provides three pre-coolers 8, 8′, 8″ for the gases “VT,” “Bearing,” and “Drive.”
Each additional exchanger that forms a gas pre-cooler is a counter-current exchanger, whose design is called “tube-in-tube” and which has a helical shape. In the inner tube 10 (for example, 8 mm), the gas to be cooled circulates from top to bottom (
In
The inputs of three additional exchangers that form the pre-coolers are supplied by the two sources of cold gases indicated above. More specifically:
1) The “VT” gas is pre-cooled by the “boil-off” cold gas (nitrogen) 5′ produced in the tank 4 of liquid nitrogen 5 in which the exchangers 6, 6′, 6″ are immersed. This cold gas 5′ passes through the inlet 13 of the outer pipe 10′ for pre-cooling. As soon as the control of the pressure of the chambers 6′″ is activated, i.e., as soon as the pressures of the chambers are constant, boiling occurs in the tank 4 around the chambers, and the cold gas that is produced (gaseous vapor 5′) passes through the circuit that is formed by the outer tube 10′ of the additional exchanger 8.
2) The cold gases at the outlet of the exchangers 6, 6′, 6″ are directed toward the probe by the transfer pipe 12′ that is coupled to an insulated internal transfer line 14, housed in the bottom of the probe structure 3. The gases exit from the internal line close to the stator 3″. The “BEARING” gas ensures the lift, the “DRIVE” gas ensures the spinning of the rotor, and the “VT” gas cools the central portion of the sample tube 3′.
3) The NMR probe 3 is thermally insulated by a double wall vacuum 2′ (Dewar). Exiting from stator 3″, the three gases are mixed in the internal volume of the probe 3 and exit by the exhaust pipe 15, outside of the box that closes the bottom probe structure 3 (
The flexible vacuum-insulated return pipe 12 that is inserted into the exhaust pipe 15 of the NMR measuring probe is held by, for example, a nut and an O-ring seal. The other end of the line is inserted in an adapter 16 fixed under the cover 4″ of the tank 4 of liquid nitrogen 5. It is held, for example, by a nut and a seal.
The adapter 16 distributes the cold gas (mixture of gases evacuated from the probe 3) toward the two inlets of the two pre-coolers 8′ and 8″ by two plastic tubes.
4) The heat exchange surface of each chamber 6′″ is the upper portion that is not thermally insulated and that is used to transfer the thermal power toward the outside of the chamber, i.e., toward the liquid nitrogen 5 contained in the tank 4. The exchange surface of each chamber 6′″ could be reduced by approximately 50% relative to the original version without pre-cooling. This reduction in surface area was made possible because the thermal power to be evacuated in each chamber is lower due to the pre-cooling of the MAS gases.
The specific assignment of the cold sources (“boil off” gas 5′ and gas mixture 9 evacuated by the probe 3) respectively to the different pre-coolers 8, 8′, 8″ is essential for proper operation of the installation 4.
Thus, and as already mentioned above and illustrated by
The VT gas is (at the unit 6/8) pre-cooled only by the so-called “boil-off” gas 5′ of the LN2 tank (reference 4). This “boil-off” gas of the LN2 tank is produced continuously by the total thermal power dissipated in the liquid nitrogen. This is the sum of the thermal losses of the LN2 tank 4 and thermal power dissipated by each chamber 6′″ containing an exchanger 6, 6′, 6″ (the power released by each chamber is a function only of the internal pressure of this chamber).
This particular assignment has the advantage of avoiding problems linked to rotor spinning instabilities and rotor gas bearing.
Actually, during the periodic filling of the liquid nitrogen tank 4 for keeping its level approximately constant, the internal pressure of the tank significantly increases.
If, under these conditions, the boil-off gas 5′ should be used, optionally in a mixture with the gas 9, for pre-cooling the DRIVE and BEARING gases, disruption of DRIVE and BEARING gas pressures would result more upstream from the probe 3. These variations would then produce fluctuations of the speed of rotation of the rotor 3′, which would thereby become difficult to control. In addition, the cold gas 9 that is evacuated from the probe 3 is at a higher temperature (on the order of 120-140 K), which would increase the consumption of liquid nitrogen and the “boil off” of the tank 4.
When no gas circulates in the primary circuit 10 of a pre-cooler 8, 8′, 8″, or if the flow rate of the gas in question is low, it is recommended to stop the flow of cold gas in the secondary circuit 10′ because a partial liquefaction of the gas of the primary circuit 10 could occur. Thus, if the boil-off gas (whose temperature is estimated at approximately 80 K) should be used to pre-cool the DRIVE or BEARING gases, which are under a pressure of 1 to 3 bar, it would be possible to partially liquefy these gases. However, this would seriously interfere with proper operation of the rotor 3′ because the BEARING and DRIVE gases should be absolutely free from droplets of liquefied nitrogen gas.
In addition, during the insertion or ejection of the sample, the rotor 3′ speed is shut down, and all of the flow rates of gases in the probe 3 are null. Consequently, the secondary flow rates of the BEARING exchanger 6′ and the DRIVE exchanger 6″ are also null, and BEARING and DRIVE gases that are present in the pre-coolers 8′ and 8″ cannot be liquefied. In contrast, if the boil-off gas 5′ was used in the secondary circuit 10′ of the BEARING pre-cooler 6′ and DRIVE pre-cooler 6″, there would exist an effective possibility of liquefaction of these gases. The design according to the invention thus avoids possible problems of rotation of the sample rotor 3.
In addition, in the particular case of the pre-cooler exchanger 8 for the VT gas, when the flow of primary gas is halted, the boil-off gas 5′ still circulates in the secondary circuit 10′. However, partial liquefaction of the VT gas in this pre-cooler 8 is never noted because the pressure of the VT gas is then low (P<<0.5 bar), while the boil-off gas temperature is 80 K or more. In addition, if liquefaction should occur, this would not create any particular problem for proper operation of the probe 3 because the VT gas does not influence the rotation or the lift of the sample.
Owing to specific arrangements of the invention, it was possible to reduce very significantly the consumption of liquid nitrogen while ensuring the quality and the characteristics of the gases sent to the probe 3.
With a prototype, it was possible for the inventor to measure a consumption of 6.5 l/LN2 per hour (with a 3.2 mm rotor rotating at 8 KHz). A reduction of more than approximately 50% relative to the consumption measured on a known equivalent supply device, not exhibiting the characteristics of the invention as shown in the description above, was thus achieved.
The reduction of the consumption of liquid nitrogen reduces the number of times that auxiliary liquid nitrogen tanks, used to keep the level of liquid nitrogen constant in the main tank, are handled.
Owing to the invention, there are therefore fewer operations of installations and connections of tanks to be done each day. Thus, a single 200-liter tank of LN2 is sufficient to ensure continuous operation for 24 hours for moderate speeds of rotation of the rotor, i.e., less than 10 KHz with a probe equipped with a 3.2 mm rotor.
The invention also has as its object an NMR measuring installation 2, in particular of the LT MAS probe type, in which the probe 3 is supplied with cold gases ensuring the cooling (VT), the lift (BEARING), and the rotation (DRIVE) of the sample (rotor 3′), whereby said installation 2 comprises and/or has a fluid connection to a device 7, 7′, 7″ for supplying cold gases, channeling these gases by means of respectively corresponding supply lines (
This installation 2 is characterized in that the supply device is a supply device 1 as described above.
As indicated above, this installation 2 advantageously comprises a transfer pipe 12 that is thermally insulated and preferably flexible, designed to channel the gases 9 that are evacuated or that escape from the probe 3 toward the additional exchanger(s) 8′, 8″ and that connects the exhaust pipe 15 of the probe 3 to the tank 4 containing the liquid gas 5.
Of course, the invention is not limited to the embodiments described and shown in the accompanying drawings. Modifications are possible, in particular from the standpoint of the composition of various elements or by substitution of technical equivalents, without thereby exceeding the field of protection of the invention.
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11 59356 | Oct 2011 | FR | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130091870 A1 | Apr 2013 | US |