The present invention relates to a miniature thermoacoustic cooler. More particularly a miniature cryo-cooler driven by a vertical comb drive.
Conventional, constant diameter resonant tube, thermoacoustic cooling devices have not been successfully applied to cryogenic temperatures. This is because piezoelectric drivers are used and they become less efficient at lower temperatures. For several reasons the magnitude of the piezoelectric effect (piezo gain) is dependent on the temperature. The piezoelectric effect is very stable at approximately room temperature. However, at cryogenic temperatures it reaches approximately 20% to 30% of its room temperature value.
Conventional, constant diameter resonant tube, thermoacoustic cooling devices suffer from several inefficiencies. First, the hysteresis of piezoelectric (PZT) drivers makes them less efficient than electrostatic drivers. Second, a constant diameter resonant tube (resonator) suffers from harmonic induced inefficiencies. Third, the assembly of the PZT driver, resonator and associated Micro-electromechanical Systems (MEMS) stack, can be difficult to directly integrate with electronics through wafer level bonding. The integration is difficult because these components may have to be assembled at component-level, instead of wafer-level, which is very costly and does not realize the benefits of batch-fabrication of MEMS technology.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention provide miniature coolers.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention provide thermoacoustic coolers.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention provide coolers with non-uniform cross sectional area resonance tubes.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention provide coolers for use in cryogenic cooling.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention provide coolers driven by vertical combs.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention provide cryogenic cooling systems that can be integrated directly into cryogenic electronic devices.
Further areas of applicability of embodiments of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description provided hereinafter. It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating exemplary embodiments of the invention, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limited the scope of the invention.
Embodiments of present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following description of exemplary embodiment(s) is merely illustrative in nature and is in no way intended to limit the invention, its application, or uses.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention provide a thermoacoustic cooling device which can have a resonance chamber operatively attached to an acoustic generator producing standing waves. The standing waves produce pressure differences, which in turn result in temperature gradients. Coupled with heat exchangers the device can operate as a cooling device, which can be attached to electronics.
The power density in a thermoacoustic cooling device, in accordance with exemplary embodiments of the invention, can be proportional to the average pressure, p in the resonant tube. A choice of a large relative p is desirable for high cooling load, because . . . convective heat transfer increases with pressure. The power density is proportional to the average pressure in the resonant tube. For micro-sized resonance tubes, the fabrication process of the resonance tube (e.g. DRIE, thermal bonding, and the like) can restrict the maximum pressure in micro electro-mechanical (MEMS) devices. Fabrication processes in accordance with exemplary embodiments of the invention (e.g. gray scale etching, micro-machining, DRIE etching, and the like) can have various allowable pressures in the resonance tube (e.g., 2 atm). Additionally, when the device is cooled to cryo temperatures, the pressure will decrease (e.g. in one embodiment to approximately one third of its initial value).
Therefore, based on the fabrication and the performance requirement, the average pressure can vary (e.g. in one embodiment 0.6 atm). The dynamic pressure, pj, can be determined by the maximum force of the acoustic wave generator (e.g. vertical comb drive) and any non-linear constraints.
The resonance tube typically contains a gas (working gas, e.g., Helium, Neon, N2, CO2, and the like). Associated with the gas is a pressure and density, which affects the acoustic wave speed (speed of sound) in the gas. The speed of waves in relation to the speed of sound in the gas normally defines a Mach Number. In some exemplary embodiments of the invention linear wave motion is desired to transport energy in one-dimension. If linear motion of the waves are desired, Aerodynamic theory states that the Mach number of the working gas should be less than 0.1 to ensure linear gas motion. The choice of the working gas(es) can depend upon the desired property for a given use and environment (e.g. Noble gases for their thermal properties, air for economy and fabrication costs).
For an improved efficient transfer of energy, a large power density of the waves can be chosen. Thermoacoustic theory states that a large power density can he achieved by using a high acoustic frequency. Acoustic theory of wave propagation in a tube shows that the acoustic frequency must satisfy:
where a is the velocity of sound for the working gas and D is the diameter of the tube so that the motion is strictly a plane wave. The fabrication process can have an affect on material properties, which can also limit the acoustic frequency. For example the thermal penetration depth and the solid's thermal penetration depth, are related to the frequency. As the frequency increases, the thermal penetration depth decreases. A decrease in penetration depth increases the difficulty of fabrication of the resonance chamber, since the gap between the parallel-plates need be reduced, making the etching of these gaps very hard.
The frequency is also related to the length of the resonant tube. Since the resonant tube can be created from stacked semiconductors (e.g. silicon) by a combining process (e.g. bonding), the tube can be designed for various wavelength standing waves (e.g. a quarter wavelength standing wave). In exemplary embodiments of the invention a quarter wavelength resonance tube can be used. In other exemplary embodiments various wavelength resonator tubes can be used and the discussion herein should not be interpreted to limit the size (e.g. a half wavelength resonator can be used).
In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention a quarter wavelength resonator tube can be used. A quarter wavelength resonator tube reduces viscous loss compared to the half wavelength resonator tube. Additionally using a quarter wavelength resonator tube can reduce the complexity and bonding process by allowing for smaller (shorter) resonance tube. The tapered tube further reduces viscous loss and possible harmonics by reducing sharp edge transitions more shaping detail (sharp edge transitions) in the stacking.
A quarter wavelength standing wave can be created by forcing an acoustic pressure release at the end of the tube. This is simulated by creating a large open volume at the end of the tube.
In accordance with exemplary embodiments of the invention several micro-machining and etching technologies (e.g. gray scale technologies and methods) can be used to fabricate the elements of a thermoacoustic cooler in accordance with exemplary embodiments of the invention. Gray scale technology can be used to cost effectively improve the efficiency of the thermoacoustic cryo-cooler by using one mask and one etching process to fabricate the curved contours that can be both perpendicular and parallel to the etching direction used to form a resonance tube.
In an example of one method of formation of a resonance tube in accordance with exemplary embodiments of the invention, a first step is to coat a uniform photoresist on a substrate. A gray scale mask, containing the information of the curved contour in the etching direction, is exposed to UV irradiation. The photoresist is developed, and the thickness of the photoresist after development can depend on the local dose of UV irradiation, which is controlled by the gray scale mask. Hence, the developed photoresist profile contains the information of the 3D microstructure. Finally, the complete 3D microstructure is transferred Into the substrate by etching step(s) (e.g. a dry etch step). Various etching times (time length of etching step(s)) and development times (time length of photoresist development) can be controlled to achieve a desired shape.
An advantage of gray scale etching techniques is that alignment error of elements of the formed 3-D structure (e.g. resonance tube) is reduced since the masks are written in a single step using different electron beam dosages to generate gray levels. Hence, gray scale etching enables the fabrication, of precise and arbitrarily shaped 3D microstructures. Although gray scale etching was discussed above in relation to fabrication of the 3-D structures forming thermoacoustic-cooling devices in accordance with exemplary embodiments of the invention, various other micro-machining and/or etching/fabrication techniques can be used (e.g. RIE, DRIE, and the like) in accordance with exemplary embodiments of the invention.
In addition to a resonator tube, an acoustic generator generates the acoustic standing wave in the resonator chamber. In exemplary embodiments of the present invention, a vertical comb drive oscillates a drive plate forming acoustic waves.
Other elements of a thermoacoustic cooling device in accordance with exemplary embodiments of the invention are heat exchangers and stacks. By exciting a standing wave within the resonant tube, a temperature difference develops across a stack in the tube, thereby enabling heat exchange between two heat exchangers.
Based on thermoacoustic theory the gas region, which participates in the thermoacoustic process, can be within the thermal penetration depth, δk of the gas, which can be expressed as:
Where, k and Cp denotes the thermal conductivity and specific heat of the working gas, respectively. ρm and ω are the average density of the working gas and angular operation frequency.
In order not to effect the acoustic field and to fully use the space occupied by the stack, the gap between two adjacent plates can be 2δx<2y0<2δs where y0 is the gap spacing between the plates and δs is the plate solid's thermal penetration, which is the distance the heat can diffuse through the solid during a wave period. To provide an adequate amount of heat storage capability, the plate thickness could satisfy 2δs<2I, where the solid's penetration can be expressed as:
Where, ks, ρs, and Cs, are the thermal conductivity, density and specific heat of the solid of the parallel plates (e.g. silicon dioxide).
In an exemplary embodiment of the invention the normalized cooling load Qcn and normalized acoustic power Wn of a cyro-cooler, using boundary layer and short-stack approximations, can be expressed as:
the normalized stack length is Lsn=κLs;
the normalized stack position is xsn=κxs;
the normalized thermal penetration depth is
the normalized temperature difference is
the blocking ratio is
the speed of sound is “a”;
the wavenumber is
and
the Prandtl number is σ=0.799.
In exemplary embodiments of the invention the stack center position xs and the stack length Ls can be chosen to optimize the cooling performance. The ratio of the temperature gradient along and to the stack and the critical temperature gradient, where the critical temperature gradient is a factor determining the output function of the thermoacoustic devices, can be less than one (1) for cooling.
In exemplary embodiments of the present invention the heat exchangers 460 and 470 can have the same geometry as the stack 450. The length of the heat exchanger Lh and the length of the cold exchanger Lc can be optimized to ensure the handling of imposed heat loads and to minimize viscous losses. The optimized values can be expressed as:
Lh=2Lc(7)
where ω is resonant frequency, pm is the average pressure in the resonant tube, is the dynamic pressure.
The description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the embodiments of the invention. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application No. 60/427,956 filed on 21 Nov. 2002. The disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
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