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Pulse-tube pre-cooled dilution units

First machines

The first pulse-tube pre-cooled dilution units were developed simultaneously in Japan, Germany and France in the late 90's, in research and industrial environments, when efficient pulse-tube cryocoolers became available.

Koike's Lab

A 41 mK hybrid refrigerator (Gifford - McMahon and pulse-tube) was built very early in Japan. The pulse-tube was used as 4K stage, making this machine a genuine pulse-tube based dilution unit. The performance was poor, however, due to the Gifford - McMahon high temperature stage.

  • A dilution refrigerator using the pulse tube and GM hybrid cryocooler for neutron scattering, Y. Koike, Y. Morii, T. Igarashi, M. Kubota, Y. Hiresaki, K. Tanida, Cryogenics 39 (1999) 579-583, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0011-2275(99)00077-6

Uhlig's Lab

Kurt Uhlig, in Garching, developed several machines of increasing performance. The first refrigerator reached 15 mK with a continuous heat exchanger (2002). A new model with a double mixing-chamber reached 4.3 mK (2004). A different machine with step heat exchangers allowed reaching T<10 mK (2012):

Godfrin's Lab

PT-DR1 Source: Godfrin & Gianese/Air Liquide A commercial pulse-tube dilution refrigerator was developed in 1999 in Grenoble (France) by H. Godfrin and Ch. Gianèse (CNRS) and the company l'Air Liquide. The first commercial machine (PT-DR1, picture on the right) was delivered to A. Giuliani (Cuoricino experiment) in 2003. With 4 sintered silver heat exchangers, the refrigerator had a base temperature of 5 mK. Because of patents and industrial know-how agreements, details were published later:

  • Pulse-tube dilution refrigeration below 10 millikelvins, T. Prouvé, H. Godfrin, C. Gianèse, S. Triqueneaux, A. Ravex, J. of Low Temp. Phys. 148 (5-6), 909-914 (2007) https://doi.org/10.1007/s10909-007-9450-6
  • Pulse-tube dilution refrigeration below 10 mK for Astrophysics; T. Prouvé, H. Godfrin, C. Gianèse, S. Triqueneaux, A. Ravex, J. of Low Temp. Phys. 151, 640-644 (2008), https://doi.org/10.1007/s10909-008-9725-6
  • Experimental results on the free cooling power available on 4K pulse tube coolers, T. Prouvé, H. Godfrin, C. Gianèse, S. Triqueneaux, A. Ravex, J. of Phys. : Conference Series 150, 012038 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/150/1/012038 (Air Liquide, U.S. Patent 6,915,642; CNRS-Air Liquide French Patent FR07 53945)
  • Développement d'un réfrigérateur à dilution prérefroidi par un tube à gaz pulsé, Thomas Prouvé, PhD Thesis, Grenoble (2007) https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00201891

The cryostats PT-DR1 (industrial version version delivered in 2003), PT-DR2 (2007, version presented at the Industrial Exhibition of LT25, Amsterdam, 2008), and PT-DR4 (Pulse-tube dilution for neutron scattering, 2021 version shown):

PT-DR1 2003 version. Source: Godfrin & Gianese/Air Liquide PT-DR2  2007 version. Source: Godfrin & Gianese/Air Liquide PT-DR4. Source: Godfrin & Triqueneaux

wiki/pulse-tube_dr.txt · Last modified: 2022/11/12 20:47 by henri.godfrin@neel.cnrs.fr