[0001] The invention relates to a device for cooling a high temperature superconductor,
which device comprises a cryocooler using a first heat exchanging medium to cool a
second heat exchanging medium to cryogenic temperatures.
[0002] Such a device can be used for cooling of any high temperature superconductor (HTS)
power device (such as cable, generator, motor, fault current limiter, or magnet, such
as maglev suspension, including that for evacuated tube transport).
[0003] Cryogenic temperatures are typically considered temperatures below -150°C.
[0004] The cooling system of HTS power devices is a known obstacle on the way to their broader
use. The current state of the art is such that due to relatively high cooling system
cost (e.g., cryostat and refrigerator) a HTS cable (e.g., for 150 kV and below, even
when to assume a zero cost for electrically insulated superconductor core) is more
expensive than a conventional cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) cable for the same
power capacity. This prevents their use in electric power networks and for this reason
only niche application of HTS power cables exist.
[0005] Cryostats and cooling devices for liquid nitrogen are known for many years and it
is rather difficult to improve their efficiency and to reduce their cost substantially
within a traditional approach.
[0006] One straightforward option to provide cooling of HTS cable cost-effectively is to
buy cheaper LN2 (that is produced by e.g. an air separation plant using waste cold
of LNG at the import LNG terminal). However, building such a (relatively large) plant
requires a substantial investment that can only be justified when there is for example
an adequate demand for cooling (e.g., of many HTS power cables). Such demand is indeed
expected in the future. At present, this demand is hindered by relatively high costs
of cryostats and cooling.
[0007] It is an object of the invention to reduce the above mentioned disadvantages.
[0008] This object is achieved with a device according to the preamble, which is characterized
by a heat exchanger having a first channel and a second channel in heat exchanging
contact with the first channel, wherein the first heat exchanging medium flows through
the first channel, wherein a third heat exchanging medium flows through the second
channel and wherein the temperature of the third heat exchanging medium is lower than
the temperature of the first heat exchanging medium.
[0009] Preferable, the third heat exchanging medium is liquid natural gas (LNG).
[0010] The invention allows using the cold of LNG (otherwise often wasted in regasification
process) for efficient cooling of a HTS power cable or other HTS device. As a result,
so-called cooling penalty factor (the number of Watts needed to remove 1 Watt at lower
temperature) can be reduced e.g., from 14 to 8 as will be shown in the example below.
At the same time, LNG is re-gasified and returned to the natural gas distribution
network, which creates additional income.
[0011] As a result of the invention, the initial investment costs into the cooling system
of a HTS device, such as a cable, reduces, remains the same or slightly increase,
but maintenance costs substantially decrease leading to faster return of the investment
and to lower lifetime costs. Furthermore, regasification device costs less, is simpler,
more compact and efficient; refrigerator costs less, is simpler, more compact and
efficient.
[0012] In a preferred embodiment of the device according to the invention the third heat
exchanging medium changes phase from liquid to gas when flowing through the second
channel and wherein the gaseous third heat exchanging medium is compressed to be fed
to a gas distribution system.
[0013] When LNG is used in the device according to the invention, the LNG will change phase
in the heat exchanger to gas phase. Although the natural gas can be flared, it could
also be compressed and fed to a natural gas distribution system, such that households
or factories can use it.
[0014] A further preferred embodiment of the device further comprises a first storage vessel
for storing the second heat exchanging medium at cryogenic temperature. Typically,
the production of the cryocooler is not in synchronization with the demand for the
second medium at cryogenic temperature. Therefore, the first storage vessel provides
a buffer to take the differences between supply and demand of the second medium at
cryogenic temperature.
[0015] Yet another embodiment of the device according to the invention further comprises
a second storage vessel for storing the third heat exchanging medium and wherein the
first storage vessel is arranged inside of the second storage vessel.
[0016] By arranging the first storage vessel inside of the second storage vessel, the heat
exchange of the first vessel is reduced, such that the second medium is kept better
at the low cryogenic temperature.
[0017] In a preferred embodiment the cryocooler is a Brayton cryocooler.
[0018] Further preferred is when the first channel of the heat exchanger is arranged directly
downstream of the compressor of the Brayton cryocooler.
[0019] Still a further preferred embodiment of the device according to the invention further
comprises a high temperature superconductor device with an inlet and outlet for cooling
medium, wherein the second heat exchanging medium is fed to the inlet of the high
temperature superconductor device.
[0020] The invention also relates to a cryostat of a high temperature superconductor device
for use with the device according to the invention, comprising two concentrically
arranged stainless steel tubes, a multi-layered thermal insulation blanket arranged
between the two concentrically arranged stainless steel tubes and a plurality of magnetic
suspensions for spacing of the multi-layered thermal insulation blanket and suspending
the inner stainless steel tube inside the outer stainless steel tube and for spacing
inner reflective layers of µLTI.
[0021] Preferably, the multi-layered thermal insulation blanket comprises an inner, outer
and at least one reflective layer spaced from each by repulsive force of arrays, strips,
dots, islands or layers of permanent magnets
[0022] In a further embodiment of the cryostat according to the invention, the permanent
magnets in the preferred direction of the heat flow are aligned with low thermal conductivity
pins attached to the inner layer of the blanket
[0023] In yet another embodiment of the cryostat according to the invention, permanent magnets
in the preferred direction of the heat flow are aligned with each other using tension
of the layers.
[0024] By using magnetic suspensions no physical contact is present to keep the inner tube
spaced from the outer tube. This contributes to a better insulation.
Example
[0025] For example, a state of the art three phase AC 150 kV, 2.5 kA, 6 km long HTS power
cable has the following characteristics: cold dielectric design, three phases in one
cryostat, total losses in kW/km: 1 (at no load) and 1.5 (full load). These include:
a cryostat 0.5; three electrically insulated HTS cores (0.3 and 0.6 at zero and full
currents) a shield (0.2 and 0.3 at zero and full currents); current leads (0.01 and
0.1 at zero and full currents), etc. With some redundancy such cable needs 10 kW cooling
capacity available 365 days/year. Such systems are commercially available, cost around
7 M€ (cryostat: 4; refrigerator: 3; note that lifetime of a refrigerator is 20 years,
therefore 3x costs of refrigerator are included in order to provide a 40 years long
lifetime with required redundancy) and consume electricity for about 90 k€/year.
[0026] To compare, a 150 kV 2.5 kA, 6 km long connection made of conventional XLPE cables
(two flat buried cables per phase, each cable has 2500 mm2 copper conductor) has an
initial investment costs of 7 M€ and losses of 532 kW, which costs 275 k€/year, therefore
the 40 year long lifetime costs are: 10 M€ (discounted to today's prices at 6% rate).
When conventional XLPE cables are replaced with HTS cables in such connection, the
savings on the cable losses amount: 275-90 =185 k€/year. Therefore, on itself, for
the considered HTS power cable system with a traditional cooling system, the expected
lifetime costs are: 8 M€ (with 2 M€ saved on the losses). When the present invention
is used instead, no economic losses exists, instead a total income is: 1074 k€/year
(275 + 799) and a total initial investment is 8 M€: 7 for the cooling system, the
costs can be even lower, due to the more compact refrigerator as explained below)
and 1 for the regasification and optional storage system). The 10 year lifetime costs
in the proposed combined cooling and regasification system are: 0 that is the initial
investment costs in the system are fully recovered after 10 years of operation. The
40 year long lifetime costs are: -8 M€ or better, in other words during the lifetime
such system pays back at least two times the initial investment in it (all lifetime
costs are discounted at 6% to today's price). This feature makes it economically attractive
to scale up application of HTS power devices.
[0027] These and other features are further explained in conjunction with the accompanying
drawings.
Figure 1 shows a diagram of Turbo-Brayton cryocooler according to the prior art.
Figure 2 shows the T-S diagram of the prior art Brayton cycle for the first heat exchanging
medium
Figure 3 shows schematically an embodiment of the device according to the invention.
Figure 4 shows schematically a storage tank for LNG for the device of figure 3
Figure 5 shows schematically the compression of gaseous natural gas to be fed to a
gas distribution network.
Figure 6 shows the T-S diagram of the device according to the invention with a Brayton
cycle for the first heat exchanging medium
Figures 7 and 8 shows schematically an embodiment of a multilayer thermal vacuum insulation
with magnetic suspension inside a cryostat of a high temperature superconductor device
according to the invention.
[0028] The prior art Turbo-Brayton cryocooler is explained with regard to figure 1. The
cryocooler has for example an electrical input power of 141 kW and cooling capacity
of 10 kW at 65-72 K, therefore cooling penalty is 14.1.
[0029] Figure 2 shows the T-S diagram of the prior art Brayton cycle of figure 1 using the
properties listed in Table 1.
[0030] In the prior art refrigeration cycle (figs. 1, 2; table 1) electric input power is
141 kW, which at the electricity price of 60 €/MWh is 74 k€/yr, plus there are some
costs associated with the water for after-cooler (neglected here).
[0031] Alternatively, to produce the same cooling power, 30 ton/wk of liquid nitrogen (LN2)
can be purchased (for 110 k€/yr) using e.g., similar cooling cycle as e.g., in the
Ampacity HTS cable project. There the cooling system uses a regular supply of LN2
(and release of N2 gas to the atmosphere, which will become a problem for wider use,
especially in densely populated areas) for its operation. In this 1 km long HTS cable
project cooling agent is produced elsewhere and supplied as a service. According to
Nexans, the cooling system is designed for 4 kW capacity at 67 K, including terminations
(6 current leads, overall 0.7 kW at 2.3 kA), they could additionally be cooled with
LN2 vapor produced in the precooling unit.
[0032] An embodiment of the device according to the invention is shown schematically in
figures 3.
[0033] For the refrigeration and liquefaction and for cooling of HTS device any known cycles
and any appropriate agents can be used (e.g.. N2, He, Ne, Ar, 02, etc., or any appropriate
mixture of these in gas, liquid, supercritical and/or solid state). For the example
shown in figure 3 we assume that the HTS device is a cable that is cooled with compressed
and sub-cooled N2, agent used for refrigeration is He (first heat exchanging medium),
for liquefaction is nitrogen N2 (second heat exchanging medium) and for regasification
is methane (representing liquefied natural gas, third heat exchanging medium). For
regasification liquefied natural gas is commonly used, but any other appropriate mixture
of hydro-carbonates is included in the proposed invention. Furthermore, any other
appropriate combination of cooling agents, cooling cycles can be used by a person
versed in the art.
[0034] Considering an open loop LNG re-gasification process and devices, then every week
at least 77 ton of LNG arrives e.g., by ship or track and is stored in a tank, see
figure 4.
[0035] From the storage tank LNG is supplied to the heat exchanger HX3 at e.g., atmospheric
pressure of 1 bar, where it evaporates (process 9-10) and cools the refrigeration
agent. Natural gas vapor after HX3 (point 10) is compressed to e.g., 40 bar (point
11, see fig. 3, right and Table 3) and returned to e.g., natural gas distribution
network.
[0036] With the example shown in figures 3, 4 and 5 and using the data of tables 2 and 3,
a pressure and temperature of LNG in the after-cooler HX3 of 1 bar and 111.5 K (point
9), however any other combination in the proposed invention is possible, e.g., 0.1
bar and 92 K.
[0037] Figure 4 schematically shows the LNG storage tank, heat exchanger HX3, LN2 storage
tank placed inside the LNG (in order to reduce heating or loss of LN2 during storage
time), additional precooling of cold compressed gas used for cooling of HTS device
(e.g., nitrogen, neon, other gas or their mix).
[0038] Figure 5 schematically shows an example of the preferred embodiment to convert natural
gas coming out of the heat exchanger HX3 from a cold vapor (e.g., 0.1 MPa, 111.7 K)
into a gas suitable for a distribution network (e.g., 4.2 MPa, 300 K, see table 3),
which is done here by a cold natural gas compressor, without a need for additional
heat exchanger.
[0039] Assuming closed loop refrigeration process and devices, then figure 6 shows the T-S
diagram of the device according to the invention with a Brayton cycle for the first
heat exchanging medium (helium in this example)
[0040] Cold return He gas after the expander (point 5 at e.g., 5.8 bar and 61.4 K, Table
2, fig. 2) warms up at almost constant pressure in the heat exchanger HX1 (process
5-6, Table 2 , figs. 2 and 4), where it cools down the return flow of N2 from HTS
cable and in HX2 (process 6-1), where it cools down the return He flow from the after-cooler
HX3; is compressed in the Compressor (to e.g., 12.2 bar) and cooled in the after-cooler
HX3 (to e.g., 115 K in the process: 1-2a-2b-2c-3). The compressed flow is cooled by
the return flow in HX2 (process 3-4) and is expanded in the expander (process 4-5).
Liquefaction process and the devices
[0041] The corresponding optional liquefaction process and devices can be arranged in any
way known to a person versed in the art. The excessive cooling capacity of the refrigerator
is used to make liquid nitrogen LN2 (e.g., during the hours of low electricity tariff)
that is stored in a tank, see fig. 3, left. During the high tariff hours the refrigerator
works at reduced capacity thus consuming less electricity and the stored LN2 is used
for cooling HTS cable directly or indirectly.
[0042] In the proposed invention due to the use of cold compressor only 54 kW of input power
is needed (to produce 10 kW cooling capacity, as compared to 141 kW input of the prototype
cycle), of which 25 kW can be covered by the expander work. In order to after-cool
gas after cold compressors, one purchases LNG for 643 k€/yr (77 ton/wk at the price
of 160 €/ton). LNG boils in the after-cooler HX3 (e.g., at 1 bar and 111.5 K) its
vapor is then compressed with a cold compressor to e.g., 40 bar and room temperature
(e.g., 300 K, fig. 5, table 3), the compressor consumes 46 kW. The total consumed
power is of the system is therefore: 75 kW = 54-25+46, or 53% of that for the prototype
cycle and the cooling penalty is therefore reduced from 14.1 (prototype) to 7.5 (proposed
invention). Furthermore, produced natural gas (e.g., at 40 bar and 300 K) is returned
e.g., to the gas distribution network for 1508 k€/yr (at 0.3 €/m3, bio-gas can be
sold even at 0.4 €/m3). As a result of this regasification process, an income of 799
k€/yr is generated. When needed, electricity cogeneration [5] can be added as well,
but not considered here. The whole process can be realized by any means known to a
person versed in the art, one example is a floating regasification unit modified according
to this invention. When bio-LNG is used as an input, clean (non-fossil) natural gas
and clean electricity are produced resulting in even higher income from regasification.
[0043] When relevant, (optional) efficient storage of electricity is organized as follows.
Storage tank for LNG (e.g., 80 ton) is needed anyway in order to provide sufficient
reserve of the proposed system operation (e.g., one week) and thus reliability of
the cooling system for HTS device, e.g., cable.
[0044] For the most efficient storage and saving of electricity, a liquid N2 tank (e.g.,
5-10 ton) can be added and placed e.g., inside of LNG tank in order to reduce the
heat leaks, see explained in fig. 4 (other option could be e.g., cooling of thermal
shield around the LN2 tank with LNG). In this case a cold of LNG is used to intercept
most of the heat leak to the stored liquid nitrogen. During e.g., low electricity
tariff hours the system stores LN2 and consumes more electricity than required for
10 kW cooling capacity needed for HTS device, and during high electricity tariff hours
the system uses less electricity (for the refrigeration) and instead uses stored LN2
to provide the cooling capacity of 10 kW (in this period nitrogen flow from HTS device
is at least partly sub-cooled in the LN2 bath of fig. 4 and not by the refrigerator)
and therefore stores and saves electricity very efficiently (almost 100% efficient
in e.g., storing and saving of ∼250 kWh in a 24 hour cycle). Furthermore, in addition
to the described internal processing and in order to increase flexibility of the proposed
system, LN2 and LNG can be traded both ways: supplied from external sources and provided
to external consumers.
[0045] Figures 7 and 8 shows schematically an embodiment of a multilayer thermal vacuum
insulation with magnetic suspension inside a cryostat of a high temperature superconductor
device according to the invention.
[0046] A prior art cryostat of a HTS cable is made of two concentric stainless steel tubes
or shells (that are usually corrugated for flexibility), a space in between contains
multilayer thermal insulation (MLI) in vacuum (typically at the level 10-5 Torr or
better). Such cryostat is commercially available, provides a heat leak of about 1W/m
and costs around 0.5-0.7 M€/km, which on itself is comparable to the costs of typical
XLPE cable, see above. Most of the thermal barrier for the heat leak is provided by
MLI and recent attempts to improve its properties include e.g., introduction of lumped
(instead of uniformly distributed) interlayer spacers [10-12].
[0047] Attempts to reduce cryostat cost are targeting 0.1-0.2 M€/km, foreseen options include
e.g., replacement of outer cryostat shell made of stainless steel with polymer, such
as polyethylene [10], etc.
[0048] Known arrangement uses LNG to thermally shield a superconducting cable placed inside.
For example known from
US20140051582. However, this arrangement is more complex and has safety issues due to possible
interactions between LNG and superconducting cable (e.g., a spark in the cable ignites
a fire in LNG vapor, e.g., a lighting attracted by a cable ignites LNG vapor, etc.).
[0049] Outer wall of a cryostat is made of any appropriate material: metal (e.g., stainless
steel, e. g. magnetic or non-magnetic), concrete (e.g., ductal or quantz), plastic
or their combination. Protective layer (e.g., line X can be used as well).
[0050] To ensure low friction of coolant inside the cryostat, along the length cryostat
is made semi-flexible, a combination of longer rigid and shorter corrugated tubes
(or bellows).
[0051] Furthermore, cryostat can have a tubular or other cross-section, or their mix (e.g.,
inner wall tubular, outer wall trapezium).
[0052] In such cryostat most of the thermal barrier is due to the multilayer thermal insulation
that prevents the heat leak by radiation, thermal conductivity of solids and (convection)
of gases. Furthermore, it is known that at around 300 K radiation dominates, while
at around 70 K thermal conductivity prevails [10]. In the proposed invention in order
to arrive at the record low heat leaks through cryostat walls (e.g., 0.2 W/m), the
radiation is suppressed to the desired level by known means (e.g., number of reflective
layers, better reflectivity, variable distance between reflective layers), the thermal
conductivity of gases is suppressed by removing (most of) fiber spacers and selecting
low outgassing materials, while the thermal conductivity of solids is suppressed by
removing most of mechanical spacers that are replaced with magnetic suspension.
[0053] Most efficient Multilayer thermal insulation (µLTI) is used to reduce heat influx
from the room temperature (300 K) to 70 K zone. This includes classical, or self-pumped,
or integral, or NICS MLI. A disadvantage of integral and NICS MLI is that density
of layers is lower and the insulation blankets are much thicker as compared to conventional
µLTI.
[0054] Integrated MLI is known where separate radiation shields are spaced with an array
of posts in particular interconnected to radiation shields or sheets comprising the
MLI layers (see e.g.:
US8234835) and in addition the posts in each layer can be connected to each other with support
arms or beams. A particular disadvantage of this solution is that the said posts are
interconnected to each other in the preferential direction of the heat flux and because
they have to transfer mechanical load in the same direction, the contact resistance
cannot be made sufficiently low.
[0055] The remaining solid state posts are made of material with high compressive strength,
low thermal conductivity and low outgassing and have a function to provide mechanical
strength to the MLI blanket. For instance, in order to withstand a uniform pressure
of 2 bar= 2kgf/cm2, such an array of posts can be introduced with a certain density.
For instance, stainless steel has a compressive strength of 200 MPA, in other words
one stainless steel post (per 1cm2 of blanket) with a cross-section of 0.2 mm2 can
in principle hold a uniform pressure of 2 bar applied to the blanket. However, a solid
state heat flux of such post (in the temperature range 300 K to 70 K) is about 0.3
W (assuming the post is 1 mm long) and for 1m2 array of such posts a heat flux is
3000 W/m2, (which is 30,000 times higher as compared to the target of 0.1 W/m2). Thus
it is rather impossible to provide the required mechanical strength of MLI using solid
state posts. On the other hand, two permanent magnets PM (each 3 mm thick, 5 mm in
diameter: 0.18 cm2area) create a pressure of 5 kgf/cm2, in other words PM density
of 0.2 PM/cm2 is in principle sufficient to counteract atmospheric pressure of 1 kgf/cm2
without a post. Furthermore, a stable suspension and thus counteraction to atmospheric
pressure is created with a PM-ReBCO pair, e.g. with ReBCO superconductor attached
to the inner cryostat wall.
[0056] Furthermore, to ensure that all NdFeB dots (islands, nodes) are firmly position against
each other in an ordered array, in every layer a net can be added made of any appropriate
material, e.g. glass fibers or activated carbon fibers with NdFeB dots positioned
in the nodes of the net. Edges of the net are fixed to the edges of MLI using one
of the known ways (e.g. as in coolcat insulation). Another way to ensure magnetic
dots remain firmly positioned against each other is by adding pins in the preferential
direction of the heat flux, said pins do not carry mechanical load and only align
said magnetic dots against each other in a column.
[0057] A typical HTS power cable phase (a former, Cu conductor, HTS core, electrical insulation,
electric and magnetic shields, liquid nitrogen, etc.) without a cryostat weights 10-20
kg/m. Three phases (without a cryostat) weight less than 50 kg/m. A typical diameter
of three phases is 0.2 m. Therefore a pressure on the cryostat wall due to the cable
weight (acting on 1/3 of the cryostat inner wall surface) is about 3 kN/m2 (kPa).
This pressure can be created by 50/m2 pairs of PM-REBCO (e.g., NdFeB PM diameter 20
mm, 5 mm height, REBCO similar dimensions, each creating a suspension force of 6 kg).
The expected cost is 0.1M€/km (estimated from the ET3 data, where 10 x heavier loads
are suspended and the cost is 1M€/km), which is acceptable, considering the total
cost of a cryostat with the heat influx of 1W/m is 0.5-0.7 M€/km.
[0058] Mechanical spacers have a function of transferring mechanical load between inner
and outer cryostat walls.
[0059] The proposed Multi-Layer Thermal Insulation (µLTI) aims to achieve record low heat
leaks approaching the radiation limit (such as 0.2 W/m2, in the temperature range
between 65 and 300 K, with 10 reflective layers and emissivity of 0.02). It consists
of sufficient number (e.g., 10) of reflective layers 2 with low emissivity (e.g.,
0.02), such as Al foil or any other with comparable or superior properties: emissivity,
outgassing, strength, thermal properties, costs, etc., allowing heating up to e.g.,
500 K under vacuum in order to remove residual gasses, such as e.g., a thin copper
foil or a polymer film on both sides covered with a few um thick high reflective Al,
Ag, or Au, etc. layers. In the state of the art MLI a fine fiber glass paper is used
as a distributed spacer of reflective layers. It is known however, that such spacer
often prevents removal of residual gases and degrades thermal conductivity of MLI.
In order to remove the gases, such paper can be loaded with activated carbon particles
or fibers. Furthermore, since thermal conductivity of glass fiber paper depends on
thermal contact resistance between the fibers, thermal conductivity of such MLI increases
with mechanical load. To solve this problem, arrays of special lumped interlayer spacers
able to carry mechanical load of MLI are used. However, they generally decrease layer
density and increase the thickness of MLI blanket, which limits their applications.
In the proposed invention, we replace most of such spacers with the proposed interlayer
spacer using magnetic levitation (suspension) of permanent magnets.
[0060] The proposed interlayer spacer transmits mechanical load using repulsion forces between
stationary permanent magnets. A column of e.g., ring-shaped permanent magnet clips
4 of one spacer, see fig. 7. is arranged in such a way that two clips with a reflective
layer in between have the same direction of magnetization and therefore attract each
other, while clips from two adjacent reflective layers repel each other. To circumvent
the Earnshaw's theorem, a pin attached e.g., to the innermost µLTI layer is used.
Such pin does not transmit mechanical load through µLTI, therefore it has smaller
thermal conductance as compared to any other lumped spacer that does.
[0061] The e.g., 10 mm long and 1 mm outer diameter pins (e.g., a thin-wall tube made of
material with good mechanical strength, non-magnetic, low thermal, low electrical
conductivities and good vacuum outgassing properties, such as Kevlar, polyimide, nylon,
or even stainless steel) are used to mutually align the permanent magnet clips 4 against
each other and to limit their possible movements preferentially to one degree of freedom
(along the pin, which is vertical direction in the figure 7). In the circumferential
direction the ends of outer (inner) layer are locked. The pins also provide structural
integrity so that layers of µLTI can move in respect to each other only in one direction.
The pins themselves do not transmit mechanical load through µLTI, this is done by
the magnetic forces. This is why each such pin has a smaller cross-section as compared
to any mechanical support pin. Innermost and outermost layers of µLTI can be made
for instance of thin foil (e.g., 50 µm stainless steel or copper with Al layer deposited
on both sides). The pins are attached to the inner surface of the innermost layer
in any way appropriate. The about 10 µm thick inner reflective µLTI layers are made
of e.g., Al foil, or polymer film (or Cu-foil) covered on both sides with Al, or Ag,
or Au layers.
[0062] Figure 7 shows: interior arrangement of the proposed µLTI: 11 - innermost layer;
12- inner reflective layers, only one is shown for simplicity; 13- outermost layer;
14-permanent magnet clips, only one set is shown; 15 - alignment pin, only one is
shown for simplicity.
[0063] Figure 8 shows: magnetic levitation of MLI blanket inside a cryostat, 21- inner cryostat
wall; 22- superconductor (e.g., YBCO) attached to it; 23- permanent magnet attached
to the µLTI blanket 24; 25- pin with a limiting cup; 26 - outer cryostat wall.
1. Device for cooling a high temperature superconductor, which device comprises a cryocooler
using a first heat exchanging medium to cool a second heat exchanging medium to cryogenic
temperatures, characterized by a heat exchanger having a first channel and a second channel in heat exchanging contact
with the first channel, wherein the first heat exchanging medium flows through the
first channel, wherein a third heat exchanging medium flows through the second channel
and wherein the temperature of the third heat exchanging medium is lower than the
temperature of the first heat exchanging medium.
2. Device according to claim 1, wherein the third heat exchanging medium is liquid natural
gas.
3. Device according to claim 2, wherein the third heat exchanging medium changes phase
from liquid to gas when flowing through the second channel and wherein the gaseous
third heat exchanging medium is compressed to be fed to a gas distribution system.
4. Device according to any of the preceding claims, further comprising a first storage
vessel for storing the second heat exchanging medium at cryogenic temperature.
5. Device according to claim 4, further comprising a second storage vessel for storing
the third heat exchanging medium and wherein the first storage vessel is arranged
inside of the second storage vessel.
6. Device according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the cryocooler is a Brayton,
Stirling or pulse tube cryocooler.
7. Device according to claim 6, wherein the first channel of the heat exchanger is arranged
directly downstream of the compressor of the Brayton, Stirling or pulse tube cryocooler.
8. Device according to any of the preceding claims, further comprising a high temperature
superconductor device with an inlet and outlet for cooling medium, wherein the second
heat exchanging medium is fed to the inlet of the high temperature superconductor
device.
9. Cryostat of a high temperature superconductor device for use with the device of claim
8, comprising two concentrically arranged stainless steel tubes, a multi-layered thermal
insulation blanket arranged between the two concentrically arranged stainless steel
tubes and a plurality of magnetic suspensions for spacing of the multi-layered thermal
insulation blanket and suspending the inner stainless steel tube inside the outer
stainless steel tube.
10. Cryostat according to claim 9, wherein the multi-layered thermal insulation blanket
comprises an inner, outer and at least one reflective layer spaced from each by repulsive
force of arrays, strips, dots, islands or layers of permanent magnets
11. Cryostat according to claim 10 wherein the permanent magnets in the preferred direction
of the heat flow are aligned with low thermal conductivity pins attached to the inner
layer of the blanket
12. Cryostat according to claim 11 wherein permanent magnets in the preferred direction
of the heat flow are aligned with each other using tension of the layers.