Title:
Why High-Frequency Pulse Tubes Can Be Tipped
Why High-Frequency Pulse Tubes Can Be Tipped
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Author(s)
Swift, G. W.
Backhaus, S.
Backhaus, S.
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Abstract
The typical low-frequency pulse-tube refrigerator loses significant cooling power when it is tipped with the pulse tube’s cold end above its hot end, because natural convection in the pulse tube loads the cold heat exchanger. Yet most high-frequency pulse-tube refrigerators work well in any orientation with respect to gravity. In such a refrigerator, natural convection is suppressed by sufficiently fast velocity oscillations, via a nonlinear hydrodynamic effect that tends to align the density gradients in the pulse tube parallel to the oscillation direction. Since gravity’s tendency to cause convection is only linear in the pulse tube’s end-to-end temperature difference while the oscillation’s tendency to align density gradients with oscillating velocity should be quadratic in that temperature difference, it is easiest to suppress convection when the end-to-end temperature difference is largest. Simple experiments demonstrate this temperature dependence, the strong dependence on the oscillating velocity, and little or no dependence on the magnitude or phase of the oscillating pressure. In some circumstances in this apparatus, the suppression of convection is a hysteretic function of oscillating velocity. In some other circumstances, a time-dependent convective state seems more difficult to suppress
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2008-05
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Proceedings