Pulse tube integral flow smoother

6715300
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Inventors

Longsworth, Ralph C.

Application #

838840

Filed

Apr-20-2001

Published

Apr-6-2004

Current US Class

062/6
165/4

International Classes

F25B 009/00; F28D 017/00

Field of Search

62/6 165/4

Assignee

IGC-APD Cryogenics (Allentown, PA)

Examiners

Doerrler; William C.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Katten Muchin Zavis Rosenman

US Patent References

4901787   Regenerative heat...
5746269   Regenerative heat...
5918470   Thermal conducta...
5953920   Tapered pulse tube...
6032464   Traveling-wave dev...
6131644   Heat exchanger an...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

An Experimental Study on the Heat Transfer Characteristics of the Heat Exchangers in the Basic Pulse Tube Refrigerator, S. Jeong et al., Cryogenic Engineering Laboratory, pp. 249-251.

Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
Several layers of fine mesh screen are diffusion bonded together to form a rigid disc or plate that is self supporting and is a flow smoother at the ends of a pulse tube expander. Layers range from fine screens on the surface facing the pulse tube to coarser screens that provide structural support without significantly adding to pressure drop across the screen assembly. The flow smoother is typically used in series with a heat exchanger at the warm end that rejects heat to ambient from the gas of the pulse tube and a heat exchanger at the cold end that receives heat from the load being cooled.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A flow smoother for use with a pulse tube cryo-expander, comprising:

at least one first layer having a first plurality of first openings for flow therethrough, said at least one first layer being porous;

at least one second layer having a second plurality of second openings for flow therethrough, said at least one second layer being porous;

at least N layers having a plurality of openings for flow therethrough, said at least N layer being porous, where N has a value of 0, 1, 2, 3 . . . n;

said layers being in series for flow therethrough and joined together to form a rigidized structure and at least one of said layers being individually non-self supporting.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to pulse tube refrigeration systems and more particularly to the construction of a flow smoother for pressurized gas as it enters either the warm or cold end of a pulse tube expander.

One can think of a portion of the gas in a pulse tube as forming a piston that replaces the solid piston in a GM or Stirling expander. This concept is feasible and has been reduced to utilitarian practice if the gas enters the pulse tube alternately at both ends with a uniform flow pattern and very small cells of turbulence. Then flow is laminar and mixing of the gas in the pulse tube is minimized. By "uniform flow" is meant that the velocity of the gas at the tube entrance is substantially uniform over a face area of several square millimeters.

However, gas entering the first and second stages of a two-stage pulse tube system often flows through entrance passages with 90.degree. bends, for example, that tend to produce uneven flow distributions. The flow must be redistributed to a uniform flow for effective pulse tube operation. Prior art flow smoothers include perforated plates, holes drilled in a plate(s) as in U.S. Pat. No. 6,082,117, and sintered spheres, used by the inventor here in early development work on pulse tube expanders. These constructions have been used both as flow smoothers and heat exchangers.
 
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