1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a refrigerator for producing refrigeration at two or more cryogenic temperatures by combining a first stage Brayton cycle engine with one or more Gifford-McMahon (“GM”) expanders. Specifically, the invention relates to a refrigerator wherein the cold gas that circulates through the Brayton cycle engine is further cooled by one or more GM expanders and transport refrigeration to one or more remote heat exchangers. Therein, the can be used for example to cool a superconducting magnet at 30 K and a surrounding shield at 70 K.
2. Background Information
A refrigeration system that operates on the Brayton cycle consists of a compressor that supplies gas at a discharge pressure to a counterflow heat exchanger, which admits gas to an expansion space through a cold inlet valve, expands the gas adiabatically, exhausts the expanded gas (which is colder) through in outlet valve, circulates the cold gas through a load being cooled, then returns the gas through the counterflow heat exchanger to the compressor at a return pressure.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,045,436, by W. E. Gifford and H. O. McMahon describes the Gifford-McMahon (“GM”) cycle. This refrigerator system also consists of a compressor that supplies gas at a discharge pressure to an expander which admits gas through an inlet valve to the warm end of a regenerator heat exchanges and then into an expansion space at the cold end of a piston from whence it returns back through the regenerator and a warm outlet valve to the compressor at a return pressure. The typical GM type expander being built today has the regenerator located inside the piston so the piston/regenerator becomes a displacer that moves from the cold end to the warm end with the gas at high pressure then from the warm end to the cold end with the gas at low pressure. An important difference between GM and Brayton type refrigerators is that Brayton cycle refrigerators can distribute cold gas to a remote load while the cold expanded gas in GM expanders is contained within the expansion space.
U.S. Patent Application Publication 2011/0219810 dated Sep. 15, 2011 by R. C. Longsworth describes a reciprocating expansion engine operating on a Brayton cycle in which the piston has a drive stem at the warm end that is driven by a mechanical drive, or gas pressure that alternates between high and low pressures, and the pressure at the warm end of the piston in the area around the drive stem is essentially the same as the pressure at the cold end of the piston while the piston is moving. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/106,218 dated May 12, 2011 by S. Dunn, et al., describes alternate means of actuating the expander piston. A compressor system that can be used to supply gas to these engines is described in published patent application U.S. 2007/0253854 titled “Compressor With Oil Bypass” by S. Dunn filed on Apr. 28, 2006. The engines described in these applications provide examples of Brayton engines that can be used in this present invention.
Adding a second piston to a Brayton engine requires a second pair of valves and their associated actuators whereas adding a GM displacer attached to the Brayton piston utilizes the first stage valves to cycle pressure to the second stage. It is thus an object of the present invention to combine the advantage of the Brayton engine to output cold gas that can be circulated to a remote heat station with the simplicity of construction of adding one or more additional stages of GM cooling to the Brayton engine and use the circulating gas to cool one or more remote heat stations at colder temperatures.
The present invention combines a Brayton engine first stage with one or more GM colder stages that uses the flow from the Brayton engine to provide refrigeration at one or more remote heat stations.
A hybrid expander for producing refrigeration at cryogenic temperatures operates with gas supplied from a source at a first pressure and returned to the source at a second pressure. The second pressure is lower than the first pressure. The hybrid expander includes
In accordance with one or more embodiments of the present invention,
Since expansion engines are usually oriented with the cold end down, in order to minimize convective losses in the heat exchanger, the movement of the piston from the cold end toward the warm end is frequently referred to as moving up, thus the piston moves up and down or to the top and bottom. The figures do not show the warm mounting plate on which warm flange 7 is mounted and the vacuum housing below the warm flange that separates the cold components from the air outside.
In
The pneumatic drive assembly includes components that are not shown which open inlet valve Vi 10, when piston 1 is near the cold end and closes it when piston 1 is near the top, and which open outlet valve Vo, 11, when piston 1 is at the top and closes it when piston 1 is near the bottom. Gas pressure in displaced volumes 3 and 23, as well as regenerator 21, is nearly the same, differing only due to pressure drop through regenerator 21 when gas is moving.
When piston 1 reaches the top, displaced volumes DVc 3 and DVw 4 have gas at a pressure near high pressure Ph in them. With inlet valve Vi 10 closed, outlet valve Vo 11 opens and allows cold gas to flow out to low pressure Pl. The pressure difference between displaced volumes DVw 4 and DVc 3 causes piston 1 to move down and draw gas into displaced volume DVw 4 from high pressure supply line 30 through a warm inlet valve Vwi 15, inlet check valve CVi 13, and connecting lines 33. The speed at which piston 1 moves down is controlled by the setting of warm inlet valve Vwi 15.
When piston 1 reaches the bottom, outlet valve Vo 11 is closed and time is allowed for gas to continue to flow into DVw 4 until the pressure is near pressure Ph. Inlet valve Vi 10 is then opened to admit gas at pressure Ph. The force imbalance due to pressure Ph acting at the cold end of piston 1 and pressure Pl acting on drive stem 2 compresses gas in displaced volume DVw 4 above pressure Ph, i.e., a third pressure, and pushes it is out through outlet check valve CVo 12, warm outlet valve Vwo, 14, aftercooler 48, and connecting lines 34 to high pressure line 30.
The speed at which piston 1 moves up is controlled by the setting of warm outlet valve Vwo 14. Displaced volume DVs 5 is connected through line 32 to low pressure return line 31; thus, it is always at pressure Pl.
The piping assembly comprises
The piping is identified as connecting the previously listed components in the system. Therein,
The piping in expander 300 differs from expander 100 in that the piping to the colder remote heat exchanger is different. The first fraction of cold gas that flows through line 36 from splitter 16 through remote heat exchanger 43 to tee 17 is the same. The balance of the flow is cooled to lower temperatures as it flows in line 39 from splitter 16 through heat exchangers 41, 46, 42, and 47, and then is warmed as it flows through heat exchangers 45, 42, and 41 before joining the first fraction of flow at tee 17. Heat is transferred from a load at temperature T1 to heat exchanger 43 and from a load at temperature T3 to heat exchanger 45.
These embodiments provide examples of many ways that the basic concepts can be applied. in accordance with one or more embodiments of the present invention, a GM displacer to the cold end of a Brayton engine piston, thus using the inlet and outlet valves of the Brayton engine to cycle gas to the volumes displaced by the piston and displacer. In accordance with one or more embodiments of the present invention, a gas is circulated by the Brayton engine to remove heat from one or more remote locations, the gas being at either high or low pressure. Counter-flow heat exchangers can be used between the GM expander stages to make the gas available to transfer heat from remote loads to the cold stage(s) of the GM expander(s) with small thermal losses imposed on the GM stage(s) by the counter-flow heat exchanger(s). Heat can alternately be transferred directly to a GM heat station. The drive mechanism for the Brayton engine and the means for opening and closing the inlet and outlet valves is a matter of choice. Helium is the preferred gas for most cryogenic refrigerators but other gases such as hydrogen and neon might be used.
Calculations have been made for the cooling that would be expected for hybrid expanders 100 and 400 from a compressor that compresses 11 g/s of helium at room temperature from 0.8 MPa to 2.2 MPa and draws about 14 KW of power. A hybrid expander 100 having a Brayton engine piston with a diameter of 100 mm and a GM displacer with a diameter of 50 mm would provide about 200 W of cooling at a remote heat exchanger at 80 K and 100 W of cooling at a remote heat exchanger at 30 K. A hybrid expander 400 having a Brayton engine piston with a diameter of 100 mm and a GM displacer with a diameter of 75 mm would provide about 175 W of cooling at a remote heat exchanger at 30 K and no cooling at 100 K. In this design the cooling from the Brayton engine is only used to remove the thermal losses in heat exchanger 40.
This application is a non-provisional counterpart to and claims priority from U.S. Ser. No. 61/917,999, filed Dec. 19, 2013, which is pending and is hereby incorporated in its entirety for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61917999 | Dec 2013 | US |