The invention relates to a refrigerator comprising a housing, a cylindrical working chamber, a cylindrical displacing member, a gap which is located between the housing and the displacing member, a regenerator which is disposed inside the displacing member, and a device alternatingly supplying the working chamber with a high-pressure gas and a low-pressure gas.
Refrigerators are low-temperature cooling machines in which thermodynamic cyclic processes take place (c.f. US-PS 29 06 01, for example). A single stage refrigerator comprises chiefly a working chamber with a displacing member. The working chamber is alternatingly connected to a high-pressure and a low-pressure gas source, so that during the forced reciprocating motion of the displacing member, the thermodynamic cyclic process (Stirling process, Gifford McMahon process, etc.) takes place. In doing so, the working gas is guided in a closed circuit. The result of this is that heat is removed from a certain area of the working chamber and the displacing member. Through two-stage refrigerators of this kind and with helium as the working gas, temperatures well under 10° K. can be produced.
A fundamental component of a refrigerator is the regenerator, through which the working gas flows before and after relaxation. The regenerator is commonly disposed within the displacing member substantially of cylindrical design. The regenerator material needs to exhibit, on the one hand, good heat storing properties so that a sufficiently high exchange of heat can take place between the working gas and the regenerator. On the other hand, both the displacing member, in particular the housing of the displacing member, as well as also the cylinder housing need to exhibit poor heat conducting properties, as otherwise the heat removed from the cold side of the working chamber and the displacing member would be replaced rapidly through heat conduction.
It is known to employ as the material for the cylindrical housing, stainless-steel. Stainless-steel exhibits, at the very low temperatures concerned here, a very low heat conductivity. However, stainless-steel as a material is not an option when the refrigerator is employed in the areas of magnetic fields (for example, within nuclear spin tomographs). In such instances the cylindrical housing is made of Novetex (plastic impregnated cotton wool fibre) or materials of similar properties. Novetex is well proven, in particular, as a material for the housing of the displacing member. As regenerator materials, mesh, balls or wool of bronze (preferably for the first stage) and lead balls (preferably for the second stage) are known.
In the instance of the refrigerators of the kind affected here, it is unavoidable that a gas flow is present also in the gap between the housing and displacing member. Said gas flow has also the disadvantageous effect, in that it contributes to the heat exchange between the cold and the warm end of the displacing member. The heat ingress into the expansion chamber (cold end of the working chamber) reduces the performance of the entire refrigerator.
In order to maintain the gas flow through the gap at a lower level compared to the gas flow through the regenerator, the designers of refrigerators of the type affected here have, in the past, employed the approach of designing this gap as narrow as possible, and/or have inserted seals. Measures of this kind are involved and thus costly. This applies in particular to seals which need to fulfil their task at extremely low temperatures. These seals consist commonly of plastic materials which shrink with increasing operating time. Maintaining of close tolerances is not possible.
A refrigerator of the aforementioned type is known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,481,879. For the purpose of reducing the disadvantages involved due to the flow through the gap it is proposed to equip either the outside surface of the displacing member or the inside surface of the housing with one or several helical grooves. Through this measure it shall be achieved that the gases dwell longer within the gap so that an improved temperature equalisation between the flowing gas and the adjacent components takes place. This solution is disadvantageous in that the gap still needs to be relatively narrow in order to achieve a helical gas flow. Moreover, a rapid heat exchange between the gas and the adjacent components does not take place, since these consist of materials which—as already detailed—not only exhibit a low heat conductivity, but also exhibit a very low heat storing capacity.
It is the task of the present invention to create a refrigerator of the aforementioned kind in which the disadvantages due to the gas flows in the gap have been removed.
This task is solved in accordance with the present invention through the characterising features of the patent claims.
Through the measures in accordance with the present invention, the gas flow through the gap is fully regenerated. The, in the instance of the state-of-the-art substantially non-existing heat storing, respectively regeneration ability of the surfaces encompassing the gap, is created in the instance of a refrigerator in accordance with the present invention by embedding a material having a high thermal capacity within the surfaces encompassing the gap on the outside of the displacing member and/or on the inside of the cylinder housing, for example. The performance of the refrigerator is thus not only improved in that an unwanted heat ingress into the expansion chamber no longer takes place, but also in that the gas mass flow flowing through the regenerator of the displacing member being, in the instance of the state-of-the-art substantially effective alone, is increased by the regenerated gas mass flow through the gap.
It is expedient to rate the storage ability of the gap gas regenerator such that the gap gas mass flow may increase with increasing operating time of the cold head without impairing the performance of the cold head. The necessary sealing effect between displacing member and cylinder wall is subject, in the instance of a gap gas regenerator, to entirely new operating conditions. In principle, it is unimportant how high the gap gas mass flow is. It is only necessary that always so much heat is given off to the gap gas regenerator so that the gap gas mass flow enters into the expansion chamber at substantially the same temperature as that of the expansion chamber. A refrigerator in accordance with the present invention may be designed to be significantly less complex; above all, the seal can be significantly simplified or even omitted. Besides a production with easily to be implemented dimensional specifications, it is in addition possible to fall back on “standard sealing rings”. Thus the cooler becomes cheaper, more simple and offers a longer service life.
Especially advantageous is the utilisation of the1) idea in accordance with the present invention in the2) second stage of a two-stage refrigerator.
1) Translator's note: The German text states “er” here whereas “der” would be appropriate. Therefore the latter has been assumed for the translation.
Further advantages and details of the present invention shall be explained with reference to the examples of embodiments depicted in the drawing FIGS. 1 to 4. Depicted is in
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2) Translator's note: The German text states “er” here whereas “der” would be appropriate. Therefore the latter has been assumed for the translation.
The displacing members 9 and 17 are of a substantially cylindrical design. Their housings 22 and 23 form hollow chambers 20a, respectively 20b serving the purpose of accommodating the regenerators. These consist, for example, of bronze mesh in the first stage and lead balls in the second stage.
The working gas is supplied, respectively discharged, through the channels 5 and 7. It flows through the bores 24, through the regenerator of the displacing member 9 and through the bores 37 into the expansion chamber 25 which is the bottom section of the working chamber 15. There the gas expands and removes heat from this area of the first stage 11 of the refrigerator. The pre-cooled gas flows further through the bore 27 in the displacing member 17 of the second stage 18, through the regenerator located in the inside chamber 20b of the displacing member 17 and through the bore 28 at the bottom end of the displacing member 17 into the expansion chamber 29 of the second stage 18. There a further expansion is effected having in this area of the second stage a cooling effect. Through the same path the gas flows back and cools the regenerator materials so that the gases flowing in again in the next cycle are already pre-cooled in the regenerator. Sealing rings 31 and 32 which are accommodated in the outside grooves 33 and 34 of the walls of the displacing members serve the purpose of sealing the displacing members 9 and 17 with respect to their related chamber walls 14 and 19. The gaps3) between the displacing members 11, 17 and the cylindrical housings 14, 19 of the working chambers 15, 21 are designated as 36 and 38 respectively.
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3) Translator's note: The German text states “spalte” here whereas “Spalte” would be correct. Therefore the latter has been assumed for the translation.
4) Translator's note: The German text states “(?)” for no apparent reason here. This has been omitted in the translation.
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In order to restrict the quantity of the gases flowing through the gap 38, a further seal 48 may be present in gap 38 at the end (warm end). However, in the instance of an optimised design of the flow resistances produced through the seal 47 and the regenerator 43, said further seal can be omitted.
In connection with the solution in accordance with drawing
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102-29-311.2 | Jun 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/04980 | 5/13/2003 | WO | 12/28/2004 |