Field of the invention
[0001] The present invention relates to a pulse-tube refrigerator, especially to the pulse-tube
refrigerator equipped with a pressure-vibration generator that generates pressure
vibration by heat.
Background of the invention
[0002] A pulse-tube refrigerator consists of a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected
to the low-temperature side of the pulse tube, and a compressor connected to the high-temperature
side of the cool storage unit. The pulse-tube refrigerator dispenses with moving parts
at the low-temperature side. A pulse-tube refrigerator with a motor-driven compressor
generates pressure vibration in the pulse tube by switching open and close alternately
a pair of high-pressure and low-pressure valves that are settled between the compressor
and the cool storage unit. The basic-type pulse-tube refrigerator by Gifford utilizes
a surface heat-pumping effect. An orifice-type pulse-tube refrigerator has a buffer
(reservoir tank) connected through the orifice to the high-temperature side of the
pulse tube. In this type, the cooling effect comes from the phase difference between
the pressure vibration in the pulse tube and the displacement of the imaginary gas
piston that is formed in the pulse tube. A double-inlet type connects the flow path
between the orifice and the pulse tube to the flow path between the cool storage unit
and the compressor with a bypass-flow path that has the other orifice.
[0003] With respect to heat engines such as Stirling engine, Figure 9 shows energy flow
patterns from heat energy to gas pressure energy in an energy conversion device using
a heat storage unit, whose boundary conditions at both ends are varied. In these patterns,
(b) of an ideal condition and (c) of rather a realistic condition do not require input
work at the low-temperature side of the heat storage unit, although require large
sweep volume at the low-temperature side. Referring to Figure 10, a former orifice-type
pulse-tube refrigerator is explained. The pulse-tube refrigerator has a pulse tube,
a cool storage unit connected to the low-temperature side of the pulse tube, and a
buffer tank. A compressor is connected to the high-temperature side (ambient temperature
side) of the cool storage unit. A cold station of very low temperature is formed at
the part between the pulse tube and the cool storage unit. The cool storage unit consists
of multiplied circle mesh plates of knitted copper wires settled in a metal cylinder,
further filled with lead spheres if necessary. Supposing a 'gas piston' drawn with
the dotted line in the pulse tube may easily explain the principle of the operation.
The name 'gas piston' comes from the expansion-compression operation like a piston
made of a rigid body, actually made of the existing gas in the pulse tube. Consider
changes of the energy flow brought by the gas passing through the orifice driven by
the pressure vibration. When the pressure in the pulse tube is high, isenthalpic inflow
to the buffer is accompanied with the falling pressure and raises entropy. When the
pressure in the tube is low, isenthalpic outflow from the buffer is accompanied with
the falling pressure and raises entropy as well. Accordingly, as far as the vibration
continues, entropy continues to increase and the work is continuously absorbed or
consumed at the orifice. Note that the average over one cycle of enthalpy flow through
the orifice is zero. As a result, a constant work passes through the pulse tube and
the gas piston operates like an expansion unit, which causes a temperature drop at
the junction of the pulse tube and the cool storage unit and operates as a refrigerator.
The explanation above shows that the mechanism of refrigeration is different from
the basic-type pulse-tube refrigerator, and is rather in line with GM cycle or Stirling
cycle cooling mechanisms.
[0004] An orifice-type pulse-tube refrigerator is in principle free from the limitation
by the critical temperature slope and may reach very low temperature that basic pulse-tube
refrigerator could not achieve. However the efficiency of this type is questionable.
Since all the expansion work is converted to heat, the energy cannot be collected,
the orifice type is not suitable for a large refrigerator system. In comparison with
GM cycle or Stirling cycle cooling systems, the enthalpy flow passing through the
cool storage unit is larger which results in lower cooling efficiency and requires
a larger cool storage unit.
[0005] The ideal cool storage unit has configuration with infinite specific heat and infinite
surface area for heat transmission in a finite space and with thermal conductivity
low for axis direction of flow and high for radius direction. For example, if the
temperatures of the gasses that flow in the both ends are 300 K and 30 K respectively
and the cool storage unit keeps a constant temperature slope, inflow at 300 K flows
out at 30 K and inflow at 30 K flows out at 300 K. This means that the gas has no
thermal vibration at any position with the flow axis.
[0006] On the other hand, the most popular type of actual cool storage units consists of
multi-layered metal fine mesh punch in a circle shape settled in a thin stainless
cylinder and is far from the ideal. This causes net cooling amount loss from an enthalpy
flow as a result of thermal vibration of the gas. The enthalpy flow is denoted <H>
by one-cycle circular integration of temperature times flow volume times low-pressure
specific heat of the flow. In order to improve the efficiency of the cool storage
unit i.e. to reduce <H>, no other choice than reducing the flow is left. However,
reducing the flow means reducing the work. Therefore, importance is how the work per
unit flow volume should be increased.
[0007] Since the basic-type pulse tube is supposed to use an ideal cool storage unit, the
enthalpy flow <H>
R in the cool storage unit is zero. The suffix R with the enthalpy flow denotes in
the cool storage unit, and P does in the pulse tube. Figure 10 shows how the efficiency
loss of the cool storage unit relates to the actual cooling volume loss. Firstly consider
the energy flow in the pulse tube and find that quite different from the basic-type
pulse tube, there is absolutely no right-hand-direction heat flux <Q>
P that is the base for cooling function. If the inner wall of the pulse tube is completely
heat insulating, no heat flux occurs and <Q>
P = 0, and accordingly equation <W>
P = <H>
P stands up, as a matter of fact, rather non-zero left-hand-side direction <Q>
P exists. Nevertheless, the orifice-type outperforms the basic type in reaching temperature
since the work absorbed by the orifice is much more than the directly transmitted
work through the surface of the pulse tube. In summery, although the surface heat-pumping
effect is limited by the compression ratio, the orifice type may increase the volume
of absorbing work by controlling the flow volume with degree of orifice open, even
though the compression ratio is low. Since the work flow decreases under condition
that enthalpy flow through the orifice is zero, entropy increases. The increased entropy
is radiated as heat in the heat exchanger and the work is converted to heat. On the
other hand, Figure 10 shows that the actual cooling volume is <H>
P passing through the pulse tube after subtracting <H>
P that passes through the cool storage unit. The reason why the reaching temperature
exists for the refrigerator is that while <H>
P decreases and <H>
R increases as temperature falls down and refrigerating volume Q finally becomes zero
as in equation <H>
P - <H>
R = 0 under condition of constant input. Accordingly, in order to lower the reaching
temperature, it is important to reduce <H>
R by reducing the flow volume under condition of constant work flowing through the
pulse tube.
[0008] Figure 11 shows a pressure vibration generator proposed in Japanese Patent Application
No. 2002-179141, wherein heat-input portion is heated to generate self-excitation
vibration in a work transmission tube. The work is amplified with a heat exchanger
when the resonator is exited and the work is put into the heat exchanger. The work
is transmitted to the work-transmission tube and is put out to the outlet portion.
The output work may be more than the input work. A part of the output work may be
used as energy to drive the cylinder. Just heating may continuously drive the pressure-vibration
generator.
[0009] The pulse-tube refrigerator disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. (Tokkai Hei)
11-182958 actualized a compact-size pulse-tube refrigerator by truncating the length
of the resonance tube of a heat-driven compressor. A self-excitation vibration of
the operation gas is generated by heating/cooling the operation gas enclosed in the
resonance tube of the heat-driven compressor. The fluid such as hydrogen in the enclosure
is cooled to the liquid state by effects of pressure amplitude of the operation gas
from the heat-driven compressor upon the pulse tube and the cool storage unit of the
refrigerator body. The length of the resonance tube may be truncated by applying a
mixture of helium and another rare gas, especially xenon gas.
[0010] However, former pulse-tube refrigerator has drawbacks such as large vibration and
electric noise if a motor drives the compressor. A compressor with Stirling cycle
or the like has a drawback of a large-size resonance tube. Although the heat-driven
compressor of the pulse-tube refrigerator cited in the Patent Reference 1 cannot solve
these problems mentioned above.
[0011] The present invention aims to solve the problems above and to implement a compact
pulse-tube refrigerator free from vibration and electric noise.
Summary of the invention
[0012] In order to solve the above mentioned problems, the present invention has configuration
of a pulse-tube refrigerator comprising a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected
to the low-temperature side of the pulse tube, a vibration generator connected to
the high-temperature side of the cool storage unit, and a reservoir with an orifice
connected to the high-temperature side of the pulse tube, and said vibration generator
consists of a heat-driven tube equipped with a heat-storage unit, a heating heat exchanger,
a radiation heat exchanger, and a work transmission tube, of a phase shifter connected
to an outlet portion of the heat-driven tube, and of a heat-driven pressure-wave generator
equipped with a return path to connect the other portion of the phase shifter and
the inlet end of the heat-driven tube. The configuration of the present invention
enabled to implement a compact pulse-tube refrigerator free from vibration and noise.
In other words, applying a solid displacer for the resonator and the phase shifter
of the vibration generator and disposing them in facing opposite made the device compact
and reduced vibration. The heat-driven pressure-wave generator with a resonator tube
by the former arts was inevitably large since a small-size resonator does not resonate.
A rather small-size resonator tube of former arts presented very low efficiency from
the friction between the operation gas and the surface of the tube and was not suitable
for actual use. By using a resonator and a phase shifter of the solid displacer, a
compact and efficient heat-driven pressure-wave generator can be implemented. From
the similar reason, arranging a resonator and a phase shifter of the solid displacer
at the heat-absorber side enables to implement a compact and efficient pulse-tube
refrigerator.
Brief description of the drawings
[0013]
Figure 1 shows a schematic diagram of the heat-driven pressure-wave generator for
the pulse-tube refrigerator in the first embodiment of the present invention,
Figure 2 shows a schematic diagram of the heat-driven pressure-wave generator for
the pulse-tube refrigerator in the second embodiment of the present invention,
Figure 3 shows a schematic diagram of the heat-driven pressure-wave generator for
the pulse-tube refrigerator in the third embodiment of the present invention,
Figure 4 shows a schematic diagram of the heat-driven pressure-wave generator for
the pulse-tube refrigerator in the fourth embodiment of the present invention,
Figure 5 shows a schematic diagram of the resonator for the pulse-tube refrigerator
in the fifth embodiment of the present invention,
Figure 6 shows a schematic diagram of the phase shifter for the pulse-tube refrigerator
in the sixth embodiment of the present invention,
Figure 7 shows a schematic diagram of the phase shifter with leakage for the pulse-tube
refrigerator in the seventh embodiment of the present invention,
Figure 8 shows operation experiment results of the heat-driven pressure-wave generator
for the pulse-tube refrigerator in the third and the fourth embodiments of the present
invention
Figure 9 shows energy-flux patterns of the heat-driven pressure-wave generator,
Figure 10 shows an energy-flow pattern of a pulse-tube refrigerator by the former
arts,
Figure 11 shows a schematic diagram of the heat-driven pressure-wave generator for
the pulse-tube refrigerator in the former arts.
Detailed description of the best embodiments
[0014] The best embodiments of the present invention are precisely explained referring to
the Figures 1 trough 8 in the following.
The first embodiment of the present invention
[0015] The first embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube refrigerator driven
by a heat-driven pressure-wave generator equipped with a heat-driven tube, a phase
shifter, and a return path.
[0016] Figure 1 shows the schematic diagram for the pulse-tube refrigerator in the first
embodiment of the present invention, wherein the pulse-tube refrigerator 1 is an orifice-type
pulse-tube refrigerator that has a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected to the
low-temperature side of the pulse tube, a vibration generator connected to the high-temperature
side of the cool storage unit, and a reservoir with the orifice connected to the high-temperature
side of the pulse tube. Although omitted in the figure, these are the same as in Figure
10. The heat storage unit 2 is a means to form an isothermal space that has a constant
thermal slope, which is called "regenerator". The heating heat exchanger 3 is a means
to supply heat to the high-temperature side of the heat storage unit 2. The radiation
heat exchanger 4 is a means to cool the low-temperature side of the heat storage unit
2 down to an ambient temperature. The work-transmission tube 5 is a heat-insulating
space and is the tube that transmits work with the pressure wave of the operation
gas. The return path 6 is a tube that returns work from the phase shifter 7 to the
heat storage unit 2. The phase shifter 7 is a means that delays the phase of the pressure
wave of the operation gas with a piston that freely reciprocates in the cylinder.
The radiation heat exchanger 4a is a means to cool the work-output side of the work-transmission
tube 5 down to an ambient temperature. The heat transmission tube 5 consists of the
radiation heat exchanger 4, the heat storage unit 2, the heating heat exchanger 3,
and the work transmission tube 5. The heat-driven tube is a device that forms a constant
thermal slope in the heat storage unit 2 and amplifies the work of the pressure wave
of the operation gas by heating the high-temperature side and cooling the low-temperature
side respectively of the heat storage device 2. The heat driven pressure-wave generator
consists of the heat-driven tube, the return path 6, and the phase shifter 7.
[0017] Here is explained the above configured pulse-tube refrigerator in the first embodiment
of the present invention. The phase shifter 7 (Displacer) arranged in bilateral symmetry
vibrates symmetrically and excites the operation gas. As a result, there occurs a
heat flux that flows from the heating heat exchanger 3 that is heated up to temperature
Th toward the radiation heat exchanger 4 that is cooled down to temperature Ta, which
causes pressure vibration in the system. This pressure vibration has a certain phase
difference with the operation gas displacement and the phase difference becomes the
work flow. The energy of the work flow is produced from the heat energy that is taken
into the system and a part of which is converted to the work energy. This is proved
by the fact that the exhausted heat energy is less than the heat energy taken into
the system.
[0018] The work flows from the radiation heat exchanger 4 at temperature Ta toward the heating
heat exchanger 3 at temperature Th. In other significant words, the work flows against
the direction that the heat flows in. The work flow is amplified when it flows through
the heat exchanger 2. A part of the amplified work flow is supplied to the radiation
heat exchanger 4 at temperature Ta through the phase shifter 7 (displacer) and the
return path 6. The rest of the work is supplied as heat source to the pulse-tube refrigerator
1. At the first stage of this explanation, it was supposed that the vibration of the
phase shifter 7 (displacer) is excited. However, the excitation work does not need
to be necessarily supplied externally since a self-excitation vibration runs with
the work left for the pulse-tube refrigerator 1 after the necessary work is consumed
for continuously running the phase shifter 7 (displacer), if the difference between
the heating temperature Th and the radiation temperature Ta is large enough.
[0019] A part of the work put out of the work-transmission tube 5 is returned to the phase
shifter 7 (displacer), and it drives the vibration of the piston in the cylinder.
The returned work is converted to a pressure wave that has a different phase with
the input pressure wave in the phase shifter 7 (displacer) and fed back to the low-temperature
side of the heat storage unit 2. The work fed-back is amplified in the heat storage
unit 2 and is transmitted to the work transmission tube 5, and is put out as a traveling
wave. The heat-driven tube functions as an amplifier that amplifies the input work
and put it out. A part of the output work is again returned to the phase shifter 7
(displacer), and this cycle continuously generates the pressure wave. This heat-driven
pressure-wave generator may be applied to an inertance-type pulse-tube refrigerator,
or to an electric generator and the like as well.
[0020] As explained above, the first embodiment of the present invention consists of the
pulse-tube refrigerator specifically driven by the heat-driven pressure-wave generator
comprising the heat-driven tube, the phase shifter, and the return path, so that the
cooling efficiency is raised with the simple configuration. Accordingly, a compact
pulse-tube refrigerator free from vibration and electrical noise can be implemented.
The second embodiment of the present invention
[0021] The second embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube refrigerator driven
by a heat-driven pressure-wave generator that is equipped with a heat-driven tube,
a resonator, a phase shifter, and a return path. The heat-driven pressure-wave generator
is a Stirling-engine type. Figure 2 shows a diagram of the pulse-tube refrigerator
in the second embodiment of the present invention. In Figure 2, the resonator 8 is
a gas-spring resonator disposed at the work-output side of the heat-driven tube. The
rest of the configuration is the same as in the first embodiment of the present invention.
The basic configuration of this pulse-tube refrigerator is the same as the pulse-tube
refrigerator in the former arts shown in Figure 11. The significant difference is
that the piston in the phase shifter can freely reciprocate. The heat-driven pressure-wave
generator consists of the heat-driven tube, the return path 6, the phase shifter 7,
and the resonator 8.
[0022] Here is explained an operation of the pulse-tube refrigerator of the second embodiment
of the present invention as configured above. After the heating heat exchanger 3 is
sufficiently heated, a self-excitation vibration occurs in the work transmission tube
5, and the resonator 8 resonates with this self-excitation vibration with a certain
phase shift. A standing wave is generated in the resonator 8 connected to the outlet
port of the heat-driven tube, by resonance of the pressure wave of the operation gas.
No output work can be taken out of the pressure wave in the resonator 8 since this
pressure wave is a standing wave. The work exchange against the resonator 8 evens
out in zero over one cycle. The amplitude of the pressure wave of the operation gas
traveling in the heat-driven tube is increased, and the amplified work in the heat-driven
tube is put out to the pulse-tube refrigerator 1. The work generated in the heat storage
unit 2 flows against the direction that the heat flows to. The operation of the phase
shifter 7 is the same as in the first embodiment.
[0023] This heat-driven pressure-wave generator is a gas-driven self-excitation Stirling
engine. The state of the energy flux in the Stirling-cycle engine is as shown in Figure
9a. Heat Q
in is supplied from the high-temperature side of the heat storage unit 2, and is taken
away as heat Q
out from the low-temperature side of the heat storage unit 2. The phase shifter 7 is
used as an acoustic inertance in the return path. The phase shifter 8 and the resonator
8 are disposed symmetrically to reduce the mechanical vibration. In order to support
the piston at a floating state, a bending bearing is used. The diameter of the piston
is 52 mm, and the moving mass is 1.85 kg. The heat storage unit 2 is 52 mm in diameter,
57 mm in length, and is filled with screens of 200 meshes. The gap between the piston
and the cylinder is about 15 µm. Heating temperature is 580 K, mean pressure is 1.5
MPa, excitation frequency is 24.5 Hz, and the minimum amplifying gain is 1.57. The
excitation frequency is higher than 23.5 Hz of the piston's resonance frequency. This
heat-driven pressure-wave generator may be applied to an inertance-type pulse-tube
refrigerator or a generator and the like as well.
[0024] As explained above, the second embodiment of the present invention consists of the
pulse-tube refrigerator specifically driven by the heat-driven pressure-wave generator
comprising the heat-driven tube, the phase shifter, and the return path, so that the
cooling efficiency is raised with the simple configuration. Accordingly, a compact
pulse-tube refrigerator free from vibration and electrical noise can be implemented.
The third embodiment of the present invention
[0025] The third embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube refrigerator driven
by a heat-driven pressure-wave generator that is equipped with a heat-driven tube
and a resonator. The heat-driven pressure-wave generator is a standing-wave type.
Figure 3 is a schematic diagram that shows the configuration of the pulse-tube refrigerator
in the third embodiment of the present invention. In Figure 3, a heat storage unit
2 is a means to form an isothermal space that has a constant thermal slope. A heating
heat exchanger 3 is a means to supply heat to the high-temperature side of the heat
storage unit 2. A radiation heat exchanger 4 is a means to cool the low-temperature
side of the heat storage unit 2 down to an ambient temperature. A high-temperature
buffer 16 is a tube where the pressure wave is reflected to excite the standing wave
in the heat-driven tube. The heat-driven tube consists of the heat storage unit 2,
the heating heat exchanger 3, the radiation heat exchanger 4, and the high-temperature
buffer 16. A resonator 8 is a gas spring resonator disposed at the junction of the
heat-driven tube and the pulse-tube refrigerator 1. The heat-driven pressure-wave
generator consists of the heat-driven tube and the resonator 8. Here is explained
the operation of the pulse-tube refrigerator in the third embodiment of the present
invention as configured above. A standing wave is generated while the pressure wave
of the operation gas resonates in the resonator 8. For the gas displacement of the
standing wave, the closed tube-end of the high-temperature buffer 16 becomes the node
and the connecting junction part of the resonator 8 becomes the loop. After the amplitude
of the pressure wave of the operation gas traveling in the heat-driven tube is increased,
the amplified work in the heat-driven tube is put out to the pulse-tube refrigerator
1. The work exchange against the resonator 8 evens out in zero over one cycle. This
heat-driven pressure-wave generator is a standing-wave-type acoustic heat engine.
The heat storage unit 2 uses a coarse mesh called 'stack'. In this heat-driven tube,
the work flows in the same direction as the heat flows in, contrary to the first and
second embodiments. Energy flows as shown in Figure 9d. Work by the pressure wave
comes in from the low-temperature-side of the heat-driven tube, reflected by the high-temperature
buffer 16, amplified with the hear storage unit 2, and goes out of the low-temperature
side of the heat-driven tube. Thus, the low-temperature side of the heat-driven tube
is the input/output port of the work. Although the length of the heat-driven tube
is short, amplitude of the standing wave is increased with the resonator 8, efficiency
of the pressure-wave generator can be high. This heat-driven pressure-wave generator
may be applied to an inertance-type pulse-tube refrigerator and an electric generator
and the like as well.
[0026] As described above, the pulse-tube refrigerator in the third embodiment of the present
invention is configured to be driven by the heat-driven pressure-wave generator equipped
with the heat-driven tube and the resonator, a compact pulse-tube refrigerator free
from vibration and electric noise may be implemented and the simple configuration
increases the cooling efficiency.
The fourth embodiment of the present invention
[0027] The fourth embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube refrigerator that
is driven by a heat-driven pressure-wave generator equipped with a resonator disposed
at the opposite side to the outlet port of the heat-driven tube.
[0028] Figure 4 is a schematic diagram that shows the configuration of the pulse-tube refrigerator
in the fourth embodiment of the present invention. In Figure 4, the pulse-tube refrigerator
1 is an orifice-type pulse-tube refrigerator. Heat storage unit 2 is a means that
configures an isothermal space with a constant thermal slope. Heating heat exchanger
3 is a means that supplies heat to the high-temperature side of the heat storage unit
2. Radiation heat exchanger 4 is a means that cools the low-temperature side of the
heat storage 2 down to an ambient temperature. Heat transmission tube 5 is a heat-insulation-tube
space that transmits work with the pressure wave of the operation gas. Radiation heat
exchanger 4a is a means that cools the work-output side of the work transmission tube
5 down to an ambient temperature. The heat-driven tube consists of the radiation heat
exchanger 4, the heat storage unit 2, the heating heat exchanger 3, and the heat transmission
tube 5. The device of heat-driven tube, by heating the high-temperature side and cooling
the low-temperature side of the heat storage unit 2, forms a constant thermal slope
in the heat storage unit 2, and amplifies the work in the pressure wave of the operation
gas. Resonator 8 is a gas-spring resonator disposed at the opposite side of the junction
of the heat-driven tube and the pulse-tube refrigerator 1. The heat-driven pressure-wave
generator consists of the heat-driven tube and the resonator 8.
[0029] Here is explained the operation of the fourth embodiment of the present invention
as configured above. A pair of resonators 8 (displacer) is attached in bilateral symmetry
to the side of radiation heat exchanger 4 at temperature Ta. A part of the heat flux
from the heating heat exchanger 3 at temperature Th is converted to a work flow. A
further part of the heat flux is taken out of the side of the radiation heat exchanger
4 at temperature Ta to excite the resonators 8 (displacer). The rest of the work is
taken out of the side of the heating heat exchanger 3 at temperature Th and is supplied
to the pulse-tube refrigerator 1 through the work-transmission tube 5. Since no feedback
loop is formed, there is no worry of instability from infinite cyclic flows.
[0030] Standing waves are generated in the resonator 8 by resonance of the pressure waves
in the operation gas. Amplitude of the pressure wave in the operation gas traveling
in the heat-driven tube is increased and the work amplified in the heat-driven tube
is put out to the pulse-tube refrigerator 1. The work exchange against the resonator
8 evens out in zero over one cycle. An experiment with the heat-driven pressure-wave
generator presented an oscillation at 31.5 Hz as the resonant frequency with Helium
as the operation gas. A pressure ratio 1.1 was obtained at 2.3 MPa of mean pressure
that is appropriate to excite the pulse-tube refrigerator. The heating temperature
Th was 723 K and the cooling temperature was 290 K. Once the pressure vibration occurred,
the vibration was sustained until the heating temperature was lowered down to less
than 450 K. These experimental results are shown in Figure 8. This heat-driven pressure-wave
generator is applied to an inertance-type pulse-tube refrigerator and an electric
generator and the like as well.
[0031] As described above, the pulse-tube refrigerator in the fourth embodiment of the present
invention is configured to be driven by the heat-driven pressure-wave generator equipped
with the resonators at both the outlet port and the opposite port of the heat-driven
tube, a compact pulse-tube refrigerator free from vibration and electric noise may
be implemented and the simple configuration increases the cooling efficiency.
The fifth embodiment of the present invention
[0032] The fifth embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube refrigerator comprising
a gas-spring resonator between the pulse tube and the orifice.
[0033] Figure 5 shows the schematic diagram of the configuration of the pulse-tube refrigerator
in the fifth embodiment of the present invention. In Figure 5, the resonator 8a consists
of a reciprocating piston and a spring of the enclosed gas. The reservoir 13 is a
buffer tank that reserves the operation gas in. The orifice 14 is an open path that
let the operation gas go through with friction. The rest of the configuration is the
same as in the fourth embodiment.
[0034] Here is explained the operation of the fifth embodiment of the present invention
as configured above. Generally, as a phase-shift controlling device of an efficient
pulse-tube refrigerator, 'inertance-type phase-shift controlling device' is used wherein
a long tube called 'inertance tube' and a reservoir tank are connected in tandem.
However, this device does not present good efficiency if applied to a compact pulse-tube
refrigerator, because it requires a small diameter for the long tube and consequently
increases the pressure loss in the vibration of the gas and at the same time decreases
the mass of the gas in the tube. As the result, the ideal resonance condition no longer
holds good.
[0035] On the other hand, an application of the controlling device with a solid piston and
an orifice makes the ideal resonance condition hold good even if the refrigerator
is downsized as required. The term of 'ideal resonance condition' means that the phase
shift of the gas disposition to the pressure wave is held at more than 90°. Recent
progress in micro-mechanics technologies made manufacturing a very small-size piston
easier, and made the implementation of the device more realistic. The phase-shift
controlling device in this system is important to make the pulse-tube refrigerator
compact.
[0036] The resonator 8a between the pulse tube 15 and the orifice 14 makes even a short
pulse-tube resonate. Since the loop of the vibration is on the resonator 8, the operation
gas is exchanged with the orifice 14 at high amplitude. Thus, a compact and efficient
phase-controlling device may be implemented. The type of the pressure-wave generator
is not the matter.
[0037] As described above, the fifth embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube
refrigerator comprising a gas-spring resonator disposed between the pulse tube and
the orifice, a compact and efficient pulse-tube refrigerator free from vibration and
electrical noise may be implemented. The simple configuration can raise the cooling
efficiency.
The sixth embodiment of the present invention
[0038] The sixth embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube refrigerator comprising
a phase shifter disposed between the pulse tube and the orifice.
[0039] Figure 6 shows a schematic diagram that presents the configuration of the pulse-tube
refrigerator in the sixth embodiment of the present invention. In Figure 6, the phase
shifter 7 is a means to retard the traveling phase of the operation gas. The rest
of the configuration is the same as in the fourth embodiment of the present invention.
[0040] Here is explained the operation of the pulse-tube refrigerator as configured above
in the sixth embodiment of the present invention. The phase shifter 7 disposed between
the pulse tube 15 and the orifice 14 retards the shifting phase of the operation gas
and can raise cooling efficiency. In comparison with the case of orifice 14 alone,
the phase shifter 7 increases the phase shift of the gas displacement against the
pressure wave and raises cooling efficiency. While the phase shift is provided 0 without
the orifice 14, it becomes 90° with the orifice 14. Further addition of the phase
shifter 7 increases the phase shift to around 110°. Parameters of the phase shifter
7 may be designed according to the purposes, and the optimum operation is obtained.
Any type of the pressure-wave generator to excite the pulse-tube refrigerator may
be applied.
[0041] As described above, the sixth embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube
refrigerator comprising the phase shifter disposed between the pulse tube and the
orifice, a compact and efficient pulse-tube refrigerator that is free from vibration
and electrical noise may be implemented. This simple configuration can raise the cooling
efficiency.
The seventh embodiment of the present invention
[0042] The seventh embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube refrigerator comprising
a phase shifter with leakage disposed between the pulse tube and the reservoir.
[0043] Figure 7 shows a schematic diagram that presents the configuration of the pulse-tube
refrigerator in the seventh embodiment of the present invention. In Figure 7, the
phase shifter with leakage 12 is a displacer that has a gap between the cylinder and
the piston that the operation gas passes through. There is no orifice.
[0044] Here is explained the operation of the pulse-tube refrigerator as configured above
in the seventh embodiment of the present invention. The phase shifter with leakage
12 disposed between the pulse tube 15 and the reservoir 13 functions as a displacer
and an orifice as well, and it operates almost the same as in the sixth embodiment
of the present invention. Although the phase shifter and the orifice are connected
in tandem in the sixth embodiment of the present invention, they are regarded as connected
parallel in the present embodiment. Using the gap between the cylinder and the piston
of the phase shifter 12 as an orifice dispenses with the orifice particularly, and
enables compact implementation of the device. Any type of the pressure-wave generator
may be applied.
[0045] As described above, the seventh embodiment of the present invention is a pulse-tube
refrigerator comprising the phase shifter with leakage disposed between the pulse
tube and the reservoir, a means to absorb the work can be made up in this simple configuration.
Applicability to industry
[0046] As explained above, it is obvious with the present invention that a compact pulse-tube
refrigerator free from vibration and noise may be implemented since the pulse-tube
refrigerator comprises a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected to the low-temperature
side of the pulse tube, and a vibration generator equipped with a reservoir with an
orifice connected to the high-temperature side of the pulse tube, under configuration
that this vibration generator is a heat-driven pressure-wave generator consisting
of a heat-driven tube, a phase shifter whose one end is connected to the outlet port
of the heat-driven tube, and a return path that connects the other end of the phase
shifter to the inlet port of the heat-driven tube, wherein the heat-driven tube consists
of a heat storage unit, a heating heat exchanger, a radiation heat exchanger, and
a work transmission tube.
1. A pulse-tube refrigerator comprising a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected to
the low-temperature side of said pulse tube, a vibration generator connected to the
high-temperature side of said cool storage unit, and a reservoir with an orifice connected
to the high-temperature side of said pulse tube, wherein said vibration generator
is a heat-driven pressure-wave generator comprising a heat-driven tube, a phase shifter
that is connected to the outlet port of said heat-driven tube at its one end, and
a return path that connects the other end of said phase shifter to the inlet port
of said heat-driven tube, wherein said heat-driven tube consists of a heat-storage
unit, a heating heat exchanger, a radiation heat exchanger, and a work-transmission
tube.
2. A pulse-tube refrigerator comprising a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected to
the low-temperature side of said pulse tube, a vibration generator connected to the
high-temperature side of said cool storage unit, and a reservoir with an orifice connected
to the high-temperature side of said pulse tube, wherein said vibration generator
is a heat-driven pressure-wave generator comprising a heat-driven tube and a resonator
connected to the low-temperature-side end of said heat-driven tube, wherein said heat-driven
tube consists of a heat-storage unit, a heating heat exchanger, a radiation heat exchanger,
and a high-temperature buffer.
3. A pulse-tube refrigerator comprising a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected to
the low-temperature side of said pulse tube, a vibration generator connected to the
high-temperature side of said cool storage unit, and a reservoir with an orifice connected
to the high-temperature side of said pulse tube, wherein said vibration generator
is a heat-driven pressure-wave generator comprising a heat-driven tube and a resonator
connected to the inlet port of said heat-driven tube, wherein said heat-driven tube
consists of a heat-storage unit, a heating heat exchanger, a radiation heat exchanger,
and a work-transmission tube.
4. A pulse-tube refrigerator comprising a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected to
the low-temperature side of said pulse tube, a vibration generator connected to the
high-temperature side of said cool storage unit, and a reservoir with an orifice connected
to the high-temperature side of said pulse tube, and further comprising a gas-spring
resonator disposed between said pulse tube and said orifice.
5. A pulse-tube refrigerator comprising a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected to
the low-temperature side of said pulse tube, a vibration generator connected to the
high-temperature side of said cool storage unit, and a reservoir with an orifice connected
to the high-temperature side of said pulse tube, and further comprising a phase shifter
disposed between said pulse tube and said orifice.
6. A pulse-tube refrigerator comprising a pulse tube, a cool storage unit connected to
the low-temperature side of said pulse tube, a vibration generator connected to the
high-temperature side of said cool storage unit, and a reservoir connected to the
high-temperature side of said pulse tube, and further comprising a phase shifter with
leakage disposed between said pulse tube and said reservoir.