Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Dilution refrigerator
A dilution refrigerator is a cryogenic device first proposed by Heinz London . Its refrigeration process uses a mixture of two isotopes of helium: helium-3 and helium-4. When cooled below 700 mK, the mixture undergoes spontaneous phase separation to form a 3He-rich phase and a 3He-poor phase.
As with evaporative cooling, energy is required to transport helium-3 atoms from the 3He-rich phase into the 3He-poor phase. If the atoms can be made to continuously cross this boundary, they effectively cool the mixture. Because the 3He-poor phase cannot have less than 6% helium-3 at equilibrium, even at absolute zero, dilution refrigeration can be effective at very low temperatures. The volume in which this takes place is known as the mixing chamber .
The simplest application is a "single-shot" dilution refrigerator. In single-shot mode, a large initial reservoir of helium-3 is gradually moved across the boundary into the 3He-poor phase. Once the helium-3 is all in the 3He-poor phase, the refrigerator cannot continue to operate.
More commonly, dilution refrigerators run in a continuous cycle. The 3He / 4He mixture is liquified in a condenser, which is connected through an impedance to the 3He-rich area of the mixing chamber. Atoms of helium-3 migrate across into the 3He-poor phase, providing cooling power, and then into a still where the liquid helium-3 evaporates. Outside the refrigerator, this gas is pumped up to a higher pressure and usually purified, and finally returns to the condenser to start the cycle again.
Continuous-cycle dilution refrigerators are commonly used for low-temperature physics experiments. Temperatures below 2 mK can be achieved with the best systems.
See Also
Adiabatic demagnetization that can be used over the temperature range 4K to micro-K and the related room temperature application of Magnetic refrigeration.
External link
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


