1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a refrigerator for producing refrigeration at cryogenic temperatures by combining a GM cycle expander with a Brayton cycle expander for the coldest stage. The GM expander can remove heat exchanger losses in the Brayton heat exchanger and make more cooling available at the colder temperature of the Brayton expander. The gas circulating through the Brayton expander can be used to transport refrigeration to one or more remote heat exchangers. It can be used for example to cool a superconducting magnet at 30 K and a surrounding shield at 70 K.
2. Discussion of the Related Art 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 a cold 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 GM cycle.
This refrigerator system also consists of a compressor that supplies gas at a discharge pressure to an expander which admits gas through a warm inlet valve to the warm end of a regenerator heat exchanger 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. Since the pressure above and below the displacer is nearly the same, the force from a drive stem required to cause the displacer to reciprocate is small, and can be provided by either a mechanical or pneumatic mechanism. 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 a GM expander is contained within the expansion space.
Published patent application US 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. Pat. No. 8,776,534 issued Jul. 15, 2014 to S. Dunn, et al., describes alternate means of actuating the expander piston. A compressor system that can be used to supply gas to either a GM cycle expander or a Brayton cycle engine is described in published patent application U.S. 2007/0253854 titled “Compressor With Oil Bypass” by S. Dunn.
Attaching a piston to a GM displacer results in a small mismatch of pressures between the cold end of the Brayton piston and the warm end of the GM displacer. The extra load on the drive stem due to this pressure difference can be minimized by the timing relationship between the warm valves that control flow to and from the GM displacer and the cold valves that control the flow to and from the Brayton piston.
It is thus an object of the present invention to combine the advantage of the Brayton engine to circulate gas to remote heat stations with the more compact construction of a GM expander. It is also an object to provide cooling at two or more temperatures and increasing the refrigeration available at the coldest stage temperature by intercepting heat leak from room temperature at one or more intermediate temperatures.
The present invention combines one or more stages of GM cycle cooling with a Brayton cycle cold stage and which uses the flow from the Brayton cold stage to cool a load at a remote heat station. Such a hybrid expander operates with a compressed gas supplied into the hybrid expander at high pressure and discharged from the hybrid expander at a lower pressure.
A GM cycle expander is characterized by a displacer reciprocating in a cylinder which creates a warm displaced volume and one or more GM cold displaced volumes which are connected by one or more regenerators. High pressure gas flows into the warm displaced volume through a warm inlet valve and out of the warm displaced volume through a warm outlet valve, the warm valves opening and closing in sequence. A seal on the displacer prevents gas from by-passing the regenerator.
A Brayton cycle expander is characterized by a piston reciprocating in a cylinder which creates a Brayton cold displaced volume. Gas flows in sequence through a supply line at high pressure, a counterflow heat exchanger, a cold inlet valve to a cold Brayton displaced volume, a cold outlet valve, then returns to the compressor through a heat exchanger that cools a load, the counterflow heat exchanger, and a return line at lower pressure. A seal on the piston prevents gas from by-passing the heat exchanger.
The Brayton expander piston is attached to the cold end of the GM expander displacer and they reciprocate together driven by one of a mechanical drive and a pneumatic drive. The warm GM inlet valve and the cold Brayton inlet valve open at the same time, the warm GM inlet valve closes either before or at the same time as the cold Brayton inlet valve, the warm GM outlet valve and the cold Brayton outlet valve open at the same time, the warm GM outlet valve closes either before or at the same time as the cold Brayton outlet valve.
One or more stages of GM cooling can be used to intercept heat in the Brayton heat exchanger and cool loads either by direct attachment to the GM heat station(s) or at remote heat stations by circulating gas flowing through the Brayton expander.
Warm inlet valve—a valve which is used to let a high pressure gas stream enter a warm displaced volume of a GM expander and operating at a temperature above 200 K
Warm outlet valve—a valve which is used to let a lower pressure gas stream exit a warm displaced volume of a GM expander and operating at a temperature above 200 K
Cold inlet valve—a valve which is used to let a high pressure gas stream enter a cold displaced volume of a Brayton expander and operating at a temperature below 200 K
Cold outlet valve—a valve which is used to let a lower pressure gas stream exit a cold displaced volume of a Brayton expander and operating at a temperature below 200 K
High pressure line—a line which is used to direct a high pressure gas stream to either of the inlet valves
Lower pressure line—a line which is used to direct a lower pressure gas stream out of cold displaced volumes
Continuing on
The Brayton cold stage expander shown in
Brayton heat exchanger 19 and 20 is split into two sections so that the high pressure gas flowing to DVcb 11 can flow through heat exchanger 21 to be cooled by refrigeration produced in DVc16 and can also be used to transport refrigeration to remote heat exchanger 22.
A pneumatic drive mechanism that can be used to drive the GM first stage which is shown schematically in
A mechanical drive mechanism that can be used to drive the GM first stage which is shown schematically in
It is important to have a mechanism in the present hybrid expander that controls the opening and closing of warm valves 15 and 16 and cold valves 17 and 18 while maintaining their fixed relation with each other and with the position of reciprocating displacer 3 and piston 10 in order to optimize the cooling that is produced and to minimize the force required to drive the reciprocating components. The driving force is minimized by having the pressures in DVw, 5, DVc1, 6, and DVcb, 11, be as close as possible throughout a cycle.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62108656 | Jan 2015 | US |