Fast cooldown miniature refrigerators

4489570
Add to folder: View Folders  
Keywords to Highlight:

full-text

print

pdf

permalink

Inventors

Little, William A.

Application #

562214

Filed

Dec-16-1983

Published

Dec-25-1984

Current US Class

029/890.035
062/51.1
165/168
165/185
505/895

International Classes

F25B 019/00

Field of Search

62/514 165/168 165/185 29/157.3

Assignee

The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University (Stanford, CA)

Examiners

Capossela; Ronald C.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

LeBlanc, Nolan, Shur & Nies

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Citation

Cite This Patent

More From Subclass 51.1

5129232   Vibration isolation...
4388814   Cryogenic device a...
5419142   Thermal protection...
4888956   Cryogenic apparat...
4038833   Detachable refriger...
4958498   Cryogenic storage...
4501131   Cryogenic cooler fo...
4878351   Cryostat
4986078   Refrigerated MR...
4571954   Waveguide phase...
4658601   Cryogenic cell
4068495   Closed loop spray c...
 

More From Class 062

4037428   Beverage cooler as...
5533361   Insulated grocery c...
5209081   Air conditioner for...
4301920   Game-fish preservi...
4450900   Mobile air conditio...
4474016   Sterile cooling system
4770002   Transport refrigerat...
5519999   Flow turning cryog...
6018951   Refrigerating and...
5974820   Refrigerant cylinde...
4490974   Isothermal positive...
5582014   Halon recovery syst...
 
Abstract
A multilayer miniature low temperature rapid cooldown refrigerator in which a central cooling chamber for a device to be continuously cooled is connected to input and output refrigerant lines by micron sized channels formed in interfaces of glass or like plates, the channels including a counterflow heat exchanger and a capillary section and the channels being so arranged as to assure rapid cooldown immediately in the region of the device to be cooled.
 
Claims
What is claimed and desired to be secured by Letters Patent is:

1. A microminiature cryogenic refrigerator for cooling superconductor devices and the like comprising at least three plates of material of low like material of low thermal conductivity bonded together in pressure tight contact over an interface area to provide a stiff laminate, said plates having a central region and a peripheral region, an outermost one of said plates being adapted to carry a device to be cooled adjacent its central region, means forming a low temperature chamber at said central region of said laminate, means forming a micron sized supply fluid passage in the interface area between two of said plates connecting an input fluid port to said low temperature chamber, said supply passage comprising a first section for conducting incoming highly compressed gas and a serially connected smaller diameter second capillary section opening into said low temperature chamber, said supply passage being of spiral configuration, and means forming outflow passages in another interface between two of said plates, said outflow passages extending radially from said low temperature chamber to an exit port adjacent the periphery of said refrigerator whereby the cooled gas flowing through said outflow passages is disposed in heat exchange relation with the incoming gas passing through said supply passage to effectively precool the gas passing through said supply passage.



Description
This invention relates generally to refrigeration and more particularly to microminiature refrigerators which are generally of the type disclosed in copending applications Ser. Nos. 259,687; now abandoned 259,688 now U.S. Pat. No. 4,392,362 and 354,616 now U.S. Pat. No. 4,386,505.

As disclosed in greater detail in the above-identified applications the refrigerators with which the present invention is concerned are Joule-Thomson refrigerators formed by a laminate of plates which are etched to provide inflow and outflow gas channels which form a counterflow gas heat exchanger, a capillary section, a boiler region and the interconnecting passages between these sections. Refrigerators of this type have particular utility in providing extremely low temperature cooling for chips or superconductor devices which are generally of small dimension, for example, a centimeter square.

The refrigerators disclosed in the aforementioned copending applications were developed for maximum efficiency in order to minimize gas flow rates required for various refrigeration capacities. There are, however, a number of cooling applications which can tolerate higher gas flow rates to achieve the primary objective of rapid cooldown. Such applications include cooling infra red detectors in tactical missiles and precision guided munitions. Fast cooldown devices might also be used to cool sensitive detectors and low noise amplifiers in scientific instruments which are operated infrequently and for relatively short durations.
 
  A miniature, nonevacuated, detector refrigerator assembly for use in infrared imaging systems is described. The assembly incorporates a miniature Joule-Thomson...  A system for transferring heat from a first (inner) surface through a second (outer) surface. The system includes at least two adjacent porous and thermally...