Cryogenic Cooling for Myriad
Applications—A STAR Is Born!
Industrial Productivity and Manufacturing
Technology
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution
Cryogenics, the science of generating extremely low temperatures,
has wide applicability throughout NASA. The Agency employs
cryogenics for rocket propulsion, high-pressure gas supply,
breathable air in space, life support equipment, electricity,
water, food preservation and packaging, medicine, imaging
devices, and electronics. Cryogenic liquid oxygen and
liquid hydrogen systems are also replacing solid rocket
motor propulsion systems in most of the proposed launch
systems—a reversion to old-style liquid propellants.
|
Qdrive’s
1S102M/A linear reciprocating motor/alternator.
All of the company’s products benefit from the
STAR motor/alternators advanced under the NASA
contract. |
I n the late 1980s, NASA wanted a compact linear alternator/motor
with reduced size and mass, as well as high efficiency,
that had unlimited service life for use in a thermally
driven power generator for space power applications. Prior
development work with free-piston Stirling converters
(a Stirling engine integrated with a linear actuator that
produces electrical power output) had shown the promise
of that technology for high-power space applications.
A dual use for terrestrial applications exists for compact
Stirling converters for onsite combined heat and power
units.
The Stirling cycle is also usable in reverse as a refrigeration
cycle suitable for cryogenic cooling, so this Stirling
converter work promised double benefits as well as dual
uses. The uses for cryogenic coolers within NASA abound;
commercial applications are similarly wide-ranging, from
cooling liquid oxygen and nitrogen, to cryobiology and
bio-storage, cryosurgery, instrument and detector cooling,
semiconductor manufacturing, and support service for cooled
superconducting power systems.
Partnership
NASA entered into a Small
Business Innovation Research (SBIR) contract with Clever Fellows Innovation Consortium,
Inc. (CFIC), of Troy, New York, through Glenn Research
Center, to develop a lighter, more robust linear alternator
based on CFIC’s novel STAR architecture. This resulted
in a 15-kilowatt prototype alternator for NASA’s Space
Power Research Engine (SPRE) that reduced overall Stirling
converter mass by 21 percent. The work accomplished through
this partnership was later extended to a line of linear
alternators and motors, used mainly in cryogenic refrigerators
that are marketed by Qdrive, formed in 2001 as the cryogenic
cooler development and manufacturing arm of CFIC.
|
Qdrive’s
water-cooled 2S102K L-form configuration desktop
cryocooler. |
Qdrive’s mission is to fill the need for quiet, low-vibration,
no-maintenance, long-life, complete cryogenic cooling
systems that are easy to use and economically attractive.
Its work with NASA has aided in its ability to meet this
goal. Qdrive’s acoustic Stirling cryocooler line is now
the industry’s widest capacity range of unitary coolers,
with 77 kelvin capacities from 10 watts to over a kilowatt.
Product Outcome
One of the advances the SBIR contract spawned was the
establishment of the manufacturing capabilities of Qdrive,
which resulted in the direct sales of the company’s STAR-based
equipment. STAR motor/alternators are now the driving
force behind all Qdrive products. STARs are linear reciprocating
devices that combine the unique commuter flexing axial
suspension, with plunger-mounted, high-energy magnets
and a robust coil-over-iron stator (the stationary portion
of a motor). These motors can be considered a hybrid of
motor and loudspeaker. Like loudspeakers, they move in
and out in response to an electrical input, but like motors,
they operate at a preferred speed (frequency), and are
powerful and efficient. Qdrive’s current STAR line has
powers from 100 to over 10,000 watts-per-unit, with efficiencies
ranging from mid-80s to well over 90 percent (the best
loudspeakers are under
50 percent).
STAR motors have a unique wear-free suspension system—with
unlimited life and extremely pure linear motion without
rubbing, rolling, sliding, or any other wearing contact—a
feature that eliminates lubrication requirements. They
utilize an innovative interlocking, moving magnet design
with low-cost block magnets, also enabled by the single-degree
of freedom suspension.
The noncontact STAR motors are combined with acoustic
Stirling coldheads in Qdrive coolers, so there are no
moving parts operating at the cold temperatures. This
design eliminates oils and other condensibles that would
otherwise foul the cold parts of conventional mechanical
coolers. A compact, balanced configuration of twin STAR
motors in the machines produces minimal vibration.
|
Qdrive’s
shrouded, air-cooled 2S102K desktop cryocooler. |
Qdrive’s technological strength is sustained by key alliances.
For manufacturing and distribution of, and continued improvements
to, its larger systems, the company has allied with Praxair,
Inc., of Danbury, Connecticut—the largest air separation
and industrial gas company in the Americas, with offices
worldwide. Praxair also designs, engineers, and constructs
cryogenic supply systems using Qdrive’s STAR motors.
Qdrive has also licensed Helix Technology Corporation,
of Mansfield, Massachusetts (recently acquired by Brooks
Automation, Inc., of Chelmsford, Massachusetts), to make
and sell its coolers for the demanding fields of semiconductor
and flat panel display manufacturing. The CTI-Cryogenics
division of Helix Technology is the global leader in cryogenic
high-vacuum products, where reliability and low-vibration
are paramount.
Other development customers include the Los Alamos National
Laboratory and the Applied Research Laboratory at Penn
State University—both global leaders in thermoacoustics—as
well as other superconducting products companies, major
international refrigeration manufacturers, NASA, the U.S.
Department of Energy, the U.S. Department of Defense,
and laboratory and university researchers globally.
Future applications will include cooling in more familiar
situations. CFIC-Qdrive has just completed the world’s
first compact and efficient thermoacoustic food refrigerator
(STAR driven) for mobile use by the U.S. Army. The modifications
required for efficient operation at noncryogenic conditions
are applicable to many other refrigeration tasks and even
to air-conditioning without environmental risks, suggesting
that this SBIR spinoff may become one of the coolest innovations
yet!
|