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Pulse Tube Cryocooler (Part 3) 

Hyperspace Pirate
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This is the third video in my series on building/testing a Pulse Tube cryocooler with the eventual goal of liquifying nitrogen/oxygen.
Part I:
• Pulse Tube Cryocooler ...
Part II:
• Pulse Tube Cryocooler ...
In this video I investigated the effects of different pulse tube materials, regenerator materials, heat sink designs, inertance tube geometry, and pressurization of the working fluid. While I didn't manage to exceed my record from the previous video of -75C drop (corresponding to a drop below ambient of about 100C), I did gather a lot of information about design factors.
My initial design in this video used a stainless steel pulse tube/regenerator housing, but i found that the temperature difference generated for a given power input was dramatically lower than with PVC parts due to conduction losses.
One of the biggest takeaways from the tests i ran was that performance is almost directly proportional to the pressurization of the working fluid, and having a large average pressure is much more important than having a high compression ratio. This is consistent with how real cryocoolers are built, which are typically pressurized anywhere from 10 to 30 atmospheres, but have pressure oscillations of under 10% of average pressure.
I also experimented with different regenerator materials, such as ceramic beads, glass beads, plastic pellets, and glass fibers, but found that compacted stainless steel wool (which i started with) still performed best.
For configurations both with the 25mm diameter piston and the 40mm diameter, i found that the cooler seemed to hit a wall at around ~100 degrees of temperature drop below ambient, where application of additional power only marginally improved performance. I suspected this was related to limitations imposed by the inertance tube and compared my 1/4" copper tubing against 3/8" flexible silicone tubing of a greater length, but I found that this change reduced performance, most likely due to increased surface roughness and flexibility in the line dissipating energy. In a future video I'll probably try to use rigid copper/aluminum tubing with a 3/8" or 1/2" inner diameter.
I also reconfigured the entire device into an alpha-type stirling cooler, but found that performance was actually dramatically reduced despite the ability to mechanically set the phase angle between compression and expansion. I think this is because the cold expander piston was causing large conduction losses through its thin aluminum walls.
I ran the device with loads disconnected, and with pistons disconnected to determine the amount of power being consumed by mechanical action as opposed to pneumatic power, and found that less than 30% of the input electrical power was actually going into the system.
Finally, I examined the effect of a double-inlet valve, which has the effect of improving phase shift and removing some of the load on the regenerator. While this didn't make a tremendous difference, the difference is very obviously apparent and repeatable.
In my next video, I'm going to build an entirely different test setup using a valve-based (or "Gifford-McMahon") configuration and a standard air compressor as a high pressure source. While this configuration is less efficient, because the input power would be so much larger, it should be an overall net positive. In addition, control over valves allows me to achieve consistent timing via digital control and fine tune it for best performance.

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20 янв 2023

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Комментарии : 411   
@frogstronaut1220
@frogstronaut1220 Год назад
You've consistently been one of the most fascinating channels I've seen. Good job!
@rodjownsu
@rodjownsu Год назад
Amennnn
@SamCooler
@SamCooler Год назад
Yeah! There are very few "maker" channels that also have a high-level engineering/physics approach like this. Love it!
@1islam1
@1islam1 Год назад
@@SamCooler 🔴 What Is Islam? 🔴 Islam is not just another religion. 🔵 It is the same message preached by Moses, Jesus and Abraham. 🔴 Islam literally means ‘submission to God’ and it teaches us to have a direct relationship with God. 🔵 It reminds us that since God created us, no one should be worshipped except God alone. 🔴 It also teaches that God is nothing like a human being or like anything that we can imagine. 🌍 The concept of God is summarized in the Quran as: 📖 { “Say, He is God, the One. God, the Absolute. He does not give birth, nor was He born, and there is nothing like Him.”} (Quran 112:1-4) 📚 🔴 Becoming a Muslim is not turning your back to Jesus. 🔵 Rather it’s going back to the original teachings of Jesus and obeying him. More ...
@NGPCO.
@NGPCO. Год назад
What would happen if you placed the whole system into a vacuum chamber?
@dr.med.janschiefer7163
@dr.med.janschiefer7163 Год назад
I love the systematic scientific evaluation of this DIY project.
@graealex
@graealex Год назад
It's probably the only way to make some progress here - who would have guessed that the far more professional looking stainless steel construction underperformed the PVC construction so significantly...
@kayakMike1000
@kayakMike1000 Год назад
@Alexander Gräf I was... mostly because of heat transfer through the hardware. With the last video I was thinking about adding a heat break I. Between the hot and cold sides, a small section that is ceramic... keep the hot side hot and the cold side cold.
@graealex
@graealex Год назад
@@kayakMike1000 That sounds like a good idea. I personally was not able to decide whether steel would have a negative impact, seeing how heat transfer is actually wanted in certain parts. Like there's a literal heat exchange. But you're right, you want the hot and cold side not to be able to conduct to each other.
@Nighthawkinlight
@Nighthawkinlight Год назад
This is an excellent project. Thanks for sharing your work and making it easy on those who will recreate it in the future.
@mattteprot
@mattteprot 7 месяцев назад
Love your vids, would like to see you try this
@sivalley
@sivalley Год назад
I noticed that the copper tubing you are using was cut with a standard tubing cutter but the ends were not de-burred. The burr formed on each tube is effectively turning your tubes into double orifices causing expansion losses at each end. And while the "orifices" are deep into the open end of the fitting they can behave like venturi tubes and waste valuable gas expansion. If you can get your hands on a 2mm swage tool so that the tube itself is the venturi instead of the ends I estimate 5 to 8% increase in capacity with the double inlet setup. Having about 1m^3/min airflow over the hot end per watt total input power will help dissipate friction loss heating significantly. My background is only phase change refrigeration and air conditioning so do with that what you will. Use of a common refrigerant like pure CO2 or 134a are my choice for hobby projects but I don't remember if you were trying to use pure air at which point I would like to point out the obvious that any moisture in the air makes all the above moot since it has a massive effect due to it's specific heat capacity. Cheers!
@fajile5109
@fajile5109 Год назад
You are absolutely correct 9:17 all of those need to be deburred and chamfered. That will increase flow rate a bit. Should upvote this its a easy thing to forget.
@KallePihlajasaari
@KallePihlajasaari Год назад
​@@fajile5109 You could place the fitting in a lathe and machine the tube ends flush with the fitting and perhaps even countersink then a bit with a drill bit. Great project and I hope you succeed. A potential source of Nitrogen would be the exhaust vent of a small consumer Oxygen concentrator. Having liquid nitrogen always available opens up a lot of possibilities. You can make multiple cold traps at N2(l), CO2(s), H2O(s) and perhaps a couple more phase change temperatures. Let you gain better solvent separation and freeze drying performance.
@mikefrom3089
@mikefrom3089 Год назад
I was thinking the same thing. Also he could put a larger copper pipe over the hot side and phase change cool it
@AphaDawg
@AphaDawg Год назад
Use HELIUM instead of regular air inside your system. I have a pulse tube cryocooler that can reach -196c. I repaired and charged it with helium @265psi and it operates at 60hz. The pistons use gas-bearing tech which keeps loss and wear low. 150 watt input will lift 5 watt load at -196c. Unit was pulled from a Superconductor Technologies band-pass filter for cell tower application.
@canonicaltom
@canonicaltom Год назад
Might be interesting to try neon, or nitrogen, instead of air. We'll be out of helium pretty soon.
@xDevscom_EE
@xDevscom_EE Год назад
STI Sapphire cooler is not pulse tube, but Stirling type cooler, so different system altogether :).
@AphaDawg
@AphaDawg Год назад
@@xDevscom_EE Yes, you are correct that the STI is a Stirling type. However, even though the term Pulse Tube refers to a specific type that does not employ a displacer, it is still often loosely used to describe any regenerative system because of the oscillatory movement of the working fluid. I will try to be more accurate.
@sideswipe147
@sideswipe147 Год назад
He said in an earlier video that he knows to use helium but that he plans for that to be the last thing he does. He wants to tinker with all the other stuff as helium gets expensive.
@Kotesu
@Kotesu Год назад
It is an absolute delight to watch a such a disciplined and thorough design process performed by somebody who is willing to go into the thermodynamics. As an engineer in a different field (comp/elec), it’s a privilege to get an inside view of a design process and issues being grappled with.
@user-ym9wi8fr6e
@user-ym9wi8fr6e 6 месяцев назад
Exactly! Dude I don't know jack ish about this but following along with the math presentations, hypotheses, trials, and plot-graphing is soooo fin dope dude What a radical dude, dude...
@cf_spacetime
@cf_spacetime Год назад
I do hope that once you reach your goal, and you will, that the series can still continue to find efficiency gains. Making something work is always goal number one on any project starting out. Making it work well is an even longer, and just as interesting, road.
@Flumphinator
@Flumphinator Год назад
So interesting. I hope we get to LN2 temps, and there’s an open source design that anyone can build and iterate with basically just a McMaster order. Great work!
@theradioweyr
@theradioweyr Год назад
I've always wanted to make my own LN2!
@BirdbrainEngineer
@BirdbrainEngineer Год назад
If you need the regenerator to cause less resistance then, like last video, I suggest trying out a different regenerator construction. Take stainless steel strips/foil, press some dimples on it (apparently a sewing machine works fine for this; alternatively I'd imagine just pressing some slight sharp notches with a knife or something would also work), and then roll it up like a rolled cake. It would be like a very dense air-cooler heatsink - air can pass (relatively) unimpeded between the different fins (layers of the roll), while still exposing a large surface area for heat transfer. While I doubt a better regenerator design alone is a miracle magic bullet for the project, if it gives you another 5C gain, then that's worth it, no?
@klab3929
@klab3929 Год назад
This project is insane! Keep it coming man, I am staying updated! :)
@alexlabs4858
@alexlabs4858 Год назад
Yes!!! This is one of the two RU-vid projects I’ve been so excited for. This and Callum Long’s mini liquid rocket engine. Keep killing it!!
@Skeys13
@Skeys13 Год назад
lol same here
@arealhumanname4150
@arealhumanname4150 Год назад
Cylos garage has a pretty tight ultra precision lathe he's building, and I mean, like, machine an optical grade mirror using a chip making machine precision lathe.
@noimagination99
@noimagination99 Год назад
Another excellent video, with great experimental planning and detailed data and discussion! As a point of reference, FYI, I have a system at work with a 2-stage Gifford-McMahon Cryocooler for condensing Helium. It has 40 W cooling capacity for stage 1 and < 1 W for stage 2. This requires a 10 HP (about 8 KW) compressor, with some serious cooling for the compressor itself. You may be running up against a compressor power constraint now. Great work, very impressive progress so far though! I can't wait to see more. Best wishes!
@sccengr
@sccengr Год назад
A couple of others have noted, and I'll add as a reminder. You are pushing into air liquification temperatures, and that will eat up a lot more power. At one atmosphere you are already hitting CO2 liquification, and at higher pressure you could be getting close to O2 liquification. And since your thermocouple is averaging the temperature over a second or two, the per cycle temperature may be oscillating above and below liquid temperatures. These rapid phase changes, many times per second, will eat up power until the bulk temperature is below the liquid temps. Probably best to switch to at least pure N2, to help mitigate the potential of phase changing. And N2 is cheaper and easier to get at welding shops then He. Great videos, and have fun exploring.
@Skeys13
@Skeys13 Год назад
Yea i was just about to comment that that flatline he keeps hitting close to -80C makes me feel like he's coming up against a phase change or something. I'd love to see him address this concern with one of his neato charts!
@maverickstout25
@maverickstout25 Год назад
Taking us through the hypothesis then proving or better yet, when you prove yourself wrong, is really gratifying and unique. Good work!
@sparc5
@sparc5 Год назад
Been waiting for so much anticipation for part 3. I hope we get a part 4. You're amazing.
@InSearchOfScience
@InSearchOfScience Год назад
Love the quick turnaround on uploads. If you have a fulltime job I have no idea how you are cranking out updates on the project so fast but I love to see it.
@AdvancedTinkering
@AdvancedTinkering Год назад
I can't wait to see where this journey is going! Great video!
@oneilgoisot9615
@oneilgoisot9615 Год назад
I've worked with pulses tubes few month ago, I'm not an expert but I may have some idea to improve your system! You can use silica aerogel as insulator. It's way better than glass wool. You can increase the surface area of your heat exchanger with heat pipe(cuts both ends and use it like a copper pipe). I've heard that regenerator is often made of stainless steel or small lead balls which have a high thermal capacity and doesn't reduce the flow too much! Commercial pulses tubes use helium mostly because it liquidized at 4K but I'll recommend you to use at least really dry air, any water vapor can drop the efficiency! Edit: typo and french
@seeker1015
@seeker1015 Год назад
I searched calloducs but no results, plus "lead bids" please explain? All I get in the search is auction like results,
@oneilgoisot9615
@oneilgoisot9615 Год назад
@@seeker1015 sorry calloducs is the french name you should search "heat pipe" Sorry I meant balls don't know why it wrote bids
@seeker1015
@seeker1015 Год назад
@@oneilgoisot9615 Ah, yes, I can see that now. Callo=heat, ducs=ducts/pipes. Thank you.
@evilplaguedoctor5158
@evilplaguedoctor5158 Год назад
Ahh, this series has got to be one the the ones Im most hyped about, not just on RU-vid, but anywhere.
@toygartumer7385
@toygartumer7385 Год назад
I'm glad that I found this channel, awesome content
@Aaron_b_c
@Aaron_b_c Год назад
Thank you for using metric. I have no idea how this works even after watching all the videos, but it's very interesting.
@bwobbles2368
@bwobbles2368 Год назад
Great work, sound experimental findings leading to incremental discovery and improvements!
@thomasrogers8239
@thomasrogers8239 Год назад
Looking good! I can't wait to follow you down this rabbit hole
@ivprojects8143
@ivprojects8143 Год назад
Fascinating! Thank you for all the effort you put into these projects and videos.
@MakersAcres
@MakersAcres Год назад
Wow, this is very impressive! It’s amazing to see the methodical and detailed approach to solving this problem. Can’t wait to see the next video.
@dumbguy2y463
@dumbguy2y463 Год назад
Your videos are very cool, and the things you make are always very unique
@mph8759
@mph8759 Год назад
I really cant wait for the next instalment of this series! Was very happy this morning when I spotted you uploaded this video. Albeit I’m somewhat versed in the technical field, this is beyond me and extremely interesting. Thank you for this contribution!
@officialdiadonacs
@officialdiadonacs Год назад
I appreciate you being so open and sharing your journey. You are becoming one of my favorite creators. Keep going my friend. 🙏
@JustAnotherAlchemist
@JustAnotherAlchemist Год назад
You hit the nail on the head with your A/C circuit analogy. I would suggest you pay mind to your pump's resonant frequency, its effect on performance and efficiency, and how you could tune that. Using the analogy again, your flywheel is like an inductor, and compressing air in the total system acts like a capacitor. This forms a resonant tank in and of itself. Adding and removing "counter springs" to your air cylinder has the analogous effect to adding and removing capacitors in parallel to the tank. You may, alternatively, wish to add or remove weight to your flywheel, and see what this does. It may not bring the system the direction you want, but it will provide useful information to be sure. 👍
@Grak70
@Grak70 Год назад
Can’t wait for updates on this project every time a new video drops. You’re doing great!
@Exotic_Chem_Lab
@Exotic_Chem_Lab Год назад
I'm about to finish my single stage precooled joule thompson cryocooler tomorrow. Wish me luck. Will soon share the details about it. It's using a mix of ethylene and nitrogen 60:40 as working fluid.
@nikoskaravitakis9437
@nikoskaravitakis9437 Год назад
good luck!
@TheMorpheus017
@TheMorpheus017 Год назад
Wow, that is everything i could hope for regarding cryocoolers, thanks for you great work, looking forward for next video!
@yannor7
@yannor7 Год назад
I am truly baffled by the quality of your work, it's a pleasure to follow your project. thank you !
@nigeljohnson9820
@nigeljohnson9820 Год назад
This is really impressive engineering, with exceptional attention to detail.
@miklov
@miklov Год назад
The pragmatic and sincere methodology keeps inspiring me. Thank you for great content!
@ryanbrooks1671
@ryanbrooks1671 Год назад
This is really great and the graphs are very helpful to understand where there's a away from a linear response.
@speedbag67
@speedbag67 Год назад
Fascinating..... Your willingness to try out different techniques to see how they affect your results AND document the failures as well as the successes is really refreshing! THAT is the core of science! You WONDER what this will do and what that will do.. and I WONDER right along with you.. it is exciting... and makes me want to watch more to see the outcome. I dare to say that MOST other channels likely do the same type of work that you do.. but merely issue a "This is how you do it" video.. and that's fine... But it's not entertaining.. I'm not interested in ever building a Pulse Tube Cryocooler... But i am incredibly interested in watching you go through the process of building one!
@xDevscom_EE
@xDevscom_EE Год назад
Great data set. It makes clear explanation why commercial PTR and GM coolers have very thin stainless steel outer housings.
@jamesdim
@jamesdim Год назад
Amazing video as always! You can definitely get better performance and lower temps with helium or argon especially under pressure. It would also be very interesting to see a dry vs humid air performance chart. You could start playing with these once you've honed down the parameters you're already tracking. Also the regenerator may be packed too tightly and the 8g vs 2g is not very conclusive since 2g is too little material and would underperform anyway. You could try 4g or 6g steel wool in the same space or even 8g but in more space. Can't wait for the next part in the series!
@wssometimesavowel3639
@wssometimesavowel3639 Год назад
It's not often that the first attempt is so effective. But you still managed to learn from it and improve design. Impressive
@beautifulsmall
@beautifulsmall Год назад
Superb presentation of the data and experimental data collection.Extreemly thorough. Its lovely to see real numbers. The high static pressure with lower ripple would favour a linear electric motor where a sprung offset can be applied. Not sure how that could be done on a crank. . Fascinating. A real adventure.
@johgude5045
@johgude5045 Год назад
By pressurizing the crank case
@zenmark42
@zenmark42 Год назад
oh yeah, I love a youtube channel with graphs and unanswered questions. can't wait for part 4
@sethschneider9764
@sethschneider9764 Год назад
I mean this in the best way possible, but these are the best videos to fall asleep to. Also very educational.
@velocity3348
@velocity3348 Год назад
I’m drooling over this series omg
@Quickened1
@Quickened1 Год назад
It's fascinating to see the inner workings of a genius's brain! Your technical analysis capabilities are unsurpassed... 👍
@lumotroph
@lumotroph Год назад
Brilliant to watch! Love your videos.
@attilagergely6734
@attilagergely6734 Год назад
This is very cool! I'm already excited about the next part.
@Antek1234l
@Antek1234l Год назад
Good progress, looking forward to see part 4
@Nick_fb
@Nick_fb Год назад
This is my favourite series on youtube.
@Xsiondu
@Xsiondu Год назад
I didn't know I liked watching thermo acoustic videos. But you did. Thank you for letting me know.
@NeedsMoreBone
@NeedsMoreBone 2 месяца назад
This is a great series, thanks very much. I suggest you try operating with the unit vertical in gravity, with the cold end of the pulse tube down, to avoid gravitationally-driven convection in the pulse tube, which will be present even despite the oscillating flow.
@bditty7393
@bditty7393 Год назад
I like that you aren't dumbing down or simplifying the content and theory it makes it so much more enjoyable that way
@resphantom
@resphantom Год назад
This video tingles my engineering bone. Can't wait for the next video.
@IteKLF
@IteKLF Год назад
Damn! Impressed again. Had to share this video with some people thats probably interested.
@realcygnus
@realcygnus Год назад
Nifty AF ! This series is fantastic.
@nobody8717
@nobody8717 Год назад
Well, you mentioned everything I was going to suggest. Lookin forward to the external cooling on the hotend test results.
@BrassMinkey
@BrassMinkey Год назад
Just leaving a thumbs up seems inadequate for the quality of this series, so I just wanted to add my thanks for the amazing information and your excellent presentation!
@ATomRileyA
@ATomRileyA Год назад
Loving these videos, cant wait to see the next one.
@ericlotze7724
@ericlotze7724 Год назад
I can see how this would be frustrating, but you keep pushing ahead!, keep up the great work!
@er88jo
@er88jo Год назад
This is the best content on RU-vid. Looking forward to every and any video in this series. I hope that when you reach -196 C you will continue the development so that I one day can have a flashlight sized HPGe-detector in my pocket.
@williambryce8527
@williambryce8527 Год назад
One of the Best RU-vid channels ever! Im learning real stuff!
@en2oh
@en2oh Год назад
excellent job! Thanks for sharing your project with us. I can't wait until you cool the hot end! Hopefully you can calculate the total cooling capacity for this beast! Amazing work!
@ekkekrosing8454
@ekkekrosing8454 Год назад
This here is definately my new favorite channel
@enaudeni
@enaudeni Год назад
Love it! Science and engineering is amazing in practice like this!
@beez1598
@beez1598 Год назад
Thank you for all the work on this!
@DerSolinski
@DerSolinski Год назад
Try to get a beefy subwoofer speaker and convert it into a membrane piston. Theoretically if you pressurize both sides of the membrane you should be able to run at higher pressures too. With a smart driver you should be able to precisely control the pressure wave. Maybe it is even possible to autodetect the best resonances with it.
@Spirit532
@Spirit532 Год назад
Very well documented progress! Another thing I'd look at is whether the water vapor in your gas causes a significant decrease in performance. It should be relatively easy to compare the performance with regular compressed air and some form of drying(even a pipe full of baked silica gel will do).
@theradioweyr
@theradioweyr Год назад
Loved the RCL comparison!
@nik4520
@nik4520 Год назад
Great to see this much progress
@solosailorsv8065
@solosailorsv8065 Год назад
'Finally found 'SmartTube" THANK YOU !!! SUBBED Great depth, data-driven analysis and optimization. Math meets Mechanics !! I'm sure there are Fluid Dynamics factoring into the resonance such as turbulence, Reflection, standing waves etc Bring in Mr. Viktor Schauberger techniques !
@peterspencer6442
@peterspencer6442 Год назад
Great work, thank you for sharing it with us!
@randygoolsby4893
@randygoolsby4893 Год назад
Can't tell you how much I enjoy seeing real engineering presented with clarity and precision. Thank you so much for this series! I can't wait for the next installment. Incidentally, the "t" in Carnot is silent (it's French).
@rogerrabbit80
@rogerrabbit80 Год назад
That's what I was going to say. It's "Car-no", not "Car-not."
@64-bit63
@64-bit63 Год назад
ive been waiting for part 3 thank you
@LiliumJSN
@LiliumJSN Год назад
Great scientific procedure. Congrats!
@sammurphy450
@sammurphy450 Год назад
can i just say thankyou for using °C much love from the rest of the world ❤❤
@nickparker
@nickparker Год назад
Awesome stuff! Grab bag of ideas: * You tried alternate regenerator materials but none of the ones shown were fibrous like your steel, so I think surface area : volume ratios were ruining them all. Have you tried plain old cotton balls, or the various types of fibrous insulation? * Have you thought about using insulative liners inside of metal components to get the pressure rating of metal but avoid contacting your working fluid with metal exposed to ambient? * You can DIY a super dense heat exchanger with 3D printed stamping molds and thin 1000 series aluminum (it's super soft and easy). Print a pair of dies wavy in one axis to make a tiny version of corrugated roof panels, then alternate a stack of corrugated, flat, corrugated, flat. Clamp the edges of your stack so they get good thermal contact with the outside of your housing.
@Betruet
@Betruet Год назад
This is great, awaiting part 4 :)
@MrHichammohsen1
@MrHichammohsen1 Год назад
This series is why i'm hitting the bell notification button.
@gakich.
@gakich. Год назад
Nice, can't wait to try doing it!
@meowme7644
@meowme7644 Год назад
Thank you Sir! 😊👍👍 Wonderful Video! Nice weekend 🌞🌨❄
@christomold3142
@christomold3142 Год назад
Great video (as always). Respect. Consider achieving Your temperature goal by magnetocaloric effect of gadolinium. It can be easier than pulse tube. Good luck!
@Sharkie1717
@Sharkie1717 Год назад
Can't wait for part 4!
@markotasevski6763
@markotasevski6763 Год назад
i just rewatched part 1 & 2 haha , love the project man!
@moconnell663
@moconnell663 Год назад
If i may make a suggestion for heat extraction, LED lamps are often cooled with an extruded tubular heat sink with a significant number of fins on the outside. If you arrange this heat sink within another pipe and run coolant through the middle with your gas in the space between the two pipes you would have an incredible amount of surface area in play.
@zyzzyva303
@zyzzyva303 Год назад
Love this series!
@stefanguiton
@stefanguiton Год назад
Excellent videos as always!
@TCPUDPATM
@TCPUDPATM Год назад
Incredible work!
@christopherleubner6633
@christopherleubner6633 Год назад
Very neat demonstration and analysis. Will recommend this for a physics instructor to demonstrate to the class good experimental method. 🤓
@koevoet7288
@koevoet7288 Год назад
Can’t wait fot part 4! Keep it up!
@JohnBoen
@JohnBoen Год назад
Two years ago I was playing with different mixtures of propane and butane to see how well heat pipes worked. We think very much alike. But you make videos about it. Okay - I will focus...
@Kambo117b
@Kambo117b Год назад
Very cool project and well explained with data. I'd love to try to build a prototype of my own. I figure your goal is to liquify air in a single stage unit. However, I assume it would work to build a dual or triple stage system where the cold end is cooling the hot side of the next stage. Even if you only got half as much -delta T out of each subsequent stage, it seems you could get liquid air in 2-3 stages.
@dany_2945
@dany_2945 Год назад
really interesting, keep up the good work
@24Deutschmark
@24Deutschmark Год назад
Thank you for these videos!
@theafro
@theafro Год назад
I come from a background of tinkering with heat-engines and it's pretty typical with many engines that the designer worries greatly about the hot-end, and pays little attention to the cold. There's often worthwhile gains to be found with a decent cooling system,. It will certainly help to keep all your nice graphs lined up if you were to use a consistent hot-end temp for baseline. I suggest an ice-water bath, as it'll provide a rock-solid repeatable temp near freezing, and should get you down to dry-ice temps with ease. Pressurising with nitrogen would also be worthwhile, it works well for engines turning heat flux into power, I can't see why it wouldn't work the other way around! of course, you'll need to use the stainless setup as PVC can be a bit dicey under pressure, but with some proper insulation and cooling where appropriate, it's quite do-able. nitrogen's cheap after all!
@johniccia6175
@johniccia6175 Год назад
Can't wait for part 4
@ChrisS-ep5qy
@ChrisS-ep5qy 7 месяцев назад
simply outstanding video (s)
@Studentofhvac
@Studentofhvac 4 месяца назад
This is excellent thank you for sharing this!
@willyouwright
@willyouwright Год назад
Really impressed with your level of data and iterative process. I think it's best to work out how to improve rough design rather than cool the heat exchangers. As you will only need to do that to scale volume of liquid N2. Lots of work needed to absolutley make sure the design is as simple as possible. Many knobs to adjust means many possible interaction to tweak.
@nicholaskawam5264
@nicholaskawam5264 Год назад
I’ll be honest, most of this mini series is way more complex than what I can understand but I think you mentioned in the first episode needing more surface area on the internal diameter of the cooper pipes so I thought I’d suggest trying sintered copper heat pipes. They are really common in pc coolers and can be purchased relatively easily.
@axieman6196
@axieman6196 Год назад
Love this project
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