Phase shifting in pulse tube refrigerators
β Scribed by A. Hofmann; H. Pan
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 290 KB
- Volume
- 39
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0011-2275
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β¦ Synopsis
Different types of pulse tube refrigerators are described by alternative phasor diagrams based on the volume flow rates applied at the ambient temperature inlets of the regenerator and of the pulse tube(s). This provides a simple means for finding the optimum phase shift between pressure and flow rate for PTRs operated with different kinds of phase shifters such as the orifice system, the inertance tube, and the double inlet arrangement. The basic features are discussed first for ideal systems with no losses. Then, those results are compared with experimental data of single-and two-stage pulse tube refrigerators and also with more comprehensive numerical calculations which take account of irreversible losses caused by friction as well as heat conduction and heat transfer. It is shown that for the pulse tube, the phase shift can be well estimated from the ideal model, whereas there is more discrepancy for the regenerator. Those phasor diagrams are shown to be helpful tools for the design of multistage systems.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Existence of steady large-scale streaming within basic pulse tube refrigerators was shown analytically. The steady component of the second-order axial velocity and the axial streaming velocity were obtained from the first-order solutions of continuity, momentum and energy equations, assuming that th
An analytic equation of the mass flow rate through the bypass of double-inlet pulse tube refrigerators was obtained by an analysis of the pressure drop in the regenerator. The work loss through the bypass is discussed based on this equation. The work loss decreases with the increase of the void volu
Most pulse tube refrigerators need an additional heat exchanger at the hot end of the working space in contrast to other refrigerators with regenerators. There is a periodic, alternate gas flow which passes through this hot heat exchanger. Due to this fact the hot heat exchanger has to be considered