The Los Alamos Solid-State Optical Refrigerator (LASSOR) Program 961476
Recent work at Los Alamos National Laboratory has demonstrated the physical principles for a new type of solid-state cryocooler based on anti-Stokes fluorescence1. From our laboratory work and computer simulations we estimate that a practical, first-generation, all-solid-state fluorescent cryocooler will have the following properties2:
no vibrations
will not produce and is not susceptible to electromagnetic interference
cool to 77 K
be ∼1% efficient (DC power to cooling power)
weigh less than 3 kg/Watt
have a lifetime of 10 years continuous operation.
This first-generation cryocooler will employ material with demonstrated fluorescent cooling capability (ytterbium doped ZBLANP). In this paper we will present the current status of our work and the current prototype design and component descriptions.
Citation: Edwards, B., Buchwald, M., Epstein, R., Gosnell, T. et al., "The Los Alamos Solid-State Optical Refrigerator (LASSOR) Program," SAE Technical Paper 961476, 1996, https://doi.org/10.4271/961476. Download Citation
Author(s):
B. C. Edwards, M. I. Buchwald, R. I. Epstein, T. R. Gosnell, C.E. Mungan, Allan Mord, James Eraker
Affiliated:
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Ball Aerospace Corp.
Pages: 5
Event:
International Conference On Environmental Systems
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
SAE 1996 Transactions - Journal of Aerospace-V105-1
Related Topics:
Computer simulation
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