Patent · US Expired

Cryostat system for temperatures on the order of 2.degree.K or less

US3983714A · kind A · utility

5Cited by
5References
21Claims
0Family size

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateJul 24, 1975
Grant dateOct 5, 1976
Priority date
Expiry dateJul 24, 1995

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC F)Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating
  • CPC primaryF25J2290/42
  • WIPO fieldChemical engineering
  • WIPO sectorChemistry

Abstract

A cryostat system for cooling a device to a temperature on the order of 2.degree.K or less includes a dewar, in which helium, in other than the superfluid state, is stored. Helium flows from the dewar through a heat exchanger tube and a restrictor tube, which controls the helium flow rate, into the cavity of a heat exchanger, to whose outer wall the device to be cooled is attached. A pressure regulator valve controls the pressure in the cavity to be very low, e.g., on the order of 30 Torr. As the helium exits the restrictor tube into the cavity, due to low pressure cavity, it becomes an aerosol mixture of helium gas and superfluid helium droplets at the desired temperature. The latter form a thin layer or film of superfluid helium on the inner side of the heat exchanger wall and thereby cool the device, which is attached to the wall to the desired temperature. The helium gas, formed during the exit of the helium into the cavity and the helium gas, formed from the superfluid helium, which is evaporated by absorbing heat from the device being cooled, are evacuated from the cavity. As they flow around the heat exchanger tube, through which helium flow from the dewar, heat is absorbed …

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.