Solid state optical refrigeration using stark manifold resonances in crystals
09574801 ยท 2017-02-21
Assignee
Inventors
- Denis V. Seletskiy (Albuquerque, NM, US)
- Richard Epstein (Santa Fe, NM, US)
- Markus P. Hehlen (Los Alamos, NM, US)
- Mansoor Sheik-Bahae (Albuquerque, NM)
Cpc classification
F25B21/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02B30/00
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H01S3/061
ELECTRICITY
H01S3/173
ELECTRICITY
F25B23/003
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01S3/0408
ELECTRICITY
F25B23/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F25B21/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A method and device for cooling electronics is disclosed. The device includes a doped crystal configured to resonate at a Stark manifold resonance capable of cooling the crystal to a temperature of from about 110K to about 170K. The crystal host resonates in response to input from an excitation laser tuned to exploit the Stark manifold resonance corresponding to the cooling of the crystal.
Claims
1. A method of exploiting Stark manifold resonances in crystals to increase the cooling efficiency of an optical refrigerator, the method comprising: doping a crystal to enable resonance at a Stark manifold resonance capable of cooling the doped crystal to a temperature of about 110K to about 155K; and laser cooling the doped crystal to a temperature of about 110K to about 155K by tuning an excitation laser to excite the doped crystal at a predetermined wavelength corresponding to a selected Stark manifold resonance at an E4-E5 Stark Manifold transition in the doped crystal; wherein the excitation laser comprises a Yb:YAG laser.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the laser cooling comprises laser cooling of the doped crystal to a temperature of about 155K.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein doping the crystal comprises doping Yb ions into a YLF crystal.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein doping comprises doping to a density of about 1% to about 40% of the crystal.
5. The method of claim 3, wherein doping comprises doping to a density of about 5% of the crystal.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising cooling an electronics device with the method of claim 1.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein doping the crystal comprises doping Yb ions into a LiYF.sub.4 (YLF) crystal to a doping density of about 1% to about 5% of the YLF crystal.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the laser cooling further comprises initially setting the excitation laser at 1030 nm with a power of 35 W before the tuning.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the tuning comprises tuning the laser to 1023 nm with a power of 9 W.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5) As described herein, for a given level of background absorption, exemplary embodiments allow for increases in the cooling efficiency of an optical refrigerator by exploiting sharp Stark manifold resonances of a crystalline material. The preferred embodiments of the present invention include composite materials and methods of making the same. Those of skill in the art will appreciate that the following description is related to preferred and/or example embodiments of the present invention, and that the scope of the present invention is defined exclusively within the appended claims.
(6) Due to long-range order in a crystal, dopant atomic levels are broadened with less inhomogeneous contribution than glasses, leading to a larger resonant as absorption in the cooling tail (i.e. below mean luminescence wavelength of the emission).
(7)
(8)
(9) In the exemplary embodiments, cooling efficiency is enhanced by exploiting Stark manifold resonance in the cooling tail. However, these embodiments are not limited by YLF crystal; rather the described concepts can be applied to any crystal host, exhibiting such levels. Embodiments can utilize the excitation of the Stark manifold resonances so cryogenic operation, for even modest purity samples, can be achieved. Currently manageable improvements in material purification can allow nitrogen liquefaction point (i.e., 77K) to be reached with an all-solid-state cryocooler, based on, for example, a Yb:YLF host, pumped in the E4-E5 transition.
(10) The described Yb doped YLF crystal can be used in applications for airborne and spaceborne sensors. An optical refrigeration or solid state optical refrigeration device using the disclosed technology offers many advantages over currently used, bulky mechanical coolers because it can be configured in a device which is vibration free, compact, lightweight and agile. Previously, only solid-state coolers based on standard thermoelectric devices were able to reach temperatures as low as 170K, and even so, only with minimal efficiency. With the disclosed embodiments, enhanced cooling efficiency can be obtained by exploiting resonances in the absorption spectrum, growing pure crystals, using thin optical fibers, keeping their sample in thermal isolation inside a vacuum and by trapping laser light in a resonant space.
(11)
(12) The optical cryocooler device 300 of
(13) In
(14) By way of further example, the laser 370 can include a CW thin-disk Yb:YAG laser (e.g. 40 W, 1030 nm) optically isolated from and mode-matched via lens pair (MML) to the resonant cavity 340 within the high vacuum chamber 320. The crystal 350 can be a Brewster-cut Yb:YLF crystal positioned inside the cavity 340, the cavity housing a partially-reflective (Ric) input-coupler (not shown) and a highly reflective back mirror (not shown). The crystal 350 can include parameters such as E//c, 5% doped and of length Lc=1.1 cm, and can have an optical impedance matching condition Ric=exp(2(,T)Lc) corresponding to total absorption on resonance beneficial for small absorption coefficients, e.g. energetically below the E4-E5 transition and/or at low temperatures. For a given cooling power, lower temperatures are achieved by minimizing the thermal load which is predominantly of black-body nature. This can be accomplished by placing the crystal 350 into the vacuum chamber 320 configured as a tightly-fit copper clamshell structure coated inside with the low thermal emissivity material 330 that is also highly absorbing at the fluorescence wavelengths. The crystal 350 can be mechanically supported by optical fibers protruding from the clamshell walls, thus minimizing adverse conductive heat load. A temperature of the crystal 350 can be monitored using non-contact differential luminescence thermometry (DLT) technique which deduces the temperature from corresponding variations of fluorescence spectrum.
(15) The doped crystal 350 is configured to resonate at a Stark manifold resonance capable of cooling the crystal to a temperature of from about 110K to about 170K. In embodiments, the crystal can be cooled to a temperature of about 155 K.
(16) The excitation laser can be tuned to exploit the Stark manifold resonance corresponding to the cooling of the crystal. The doped crystal can include a ytterbium dopant at a density of about 1% to about 40% of a YLF crystal. The doping can further be at a density of about 5%. The excitation laser can include a YAG laser, and more particularly a Yb:YAG laser.
(17) Using active cavity stabilization of
(18) In the configuration of
(19) With measured values of nay, and n.sub.abs(,T) and n.sub.ext, cooling efficiency can be plotted as a function of both frequency and temperature. The E4-E5 transition produces maximum cooling efficiency, where a minimum temperature of 110 K is predicted for the doped crystal parameters. Even lower temperatures and higher cooling efficiencies can be expected upon enhancement of n.sub.abs by higher purity and/or ytterbium concentration. For a fixed doping density, an eightfold improvement in sample purity will result in achievable temperatures near nitrogen liquefaction. A cooling efficiency of 1.25% will be possible at 100 K, making the disclosed technology practical for many applications.
(20) In summary, a new milestone has now been reached in the field of laser cooling of solids. By making use of the sharp Stark resonance of ytterbium ions doped into a crystalline solid, an absolute temperature of about 1551 K accompanied by about 90 mW of heat lift can been achieved with a single-stage refrigerator. This surpasses the performance of currently available Peltier coolers. Analysis shows that a minimum temperature of about 110 K can be reached for existing Yb:YLF crystals when excited directly at the E4-E5 transition with sufficient laser power.
(21) The crystal 350 disclosed herein can be incorporated into known glass walled cryocooling devices used for cooling electronics. Essentially, the known cryocooling devices can be modified by replacing the glass housing with the crystal structure, to achieve the lower cooling temperatures disclosed herein, and which have been previously unattainable by the known glass walled cryocooling devices. Accordingly, the present disclosure is intended to encompass cooling of electronic devices with the solid state cooling structure alone or incorporating the doped crystal configured to resonate at a Stark manifold resonance capable of cooling the crystal to a temperature of from about 110K to about 170K.
(22)
(23) In particular,
(24) In embodiments, the cooling can be to a temperature of about 155K.
(25) Doping the crystal can include doping Yb ions into a YLF crystal. The doping can include doping to a density of about 1% to about 40% of the crystal. In embodiments, doping can be to a density of about 5% of the crystal. The excitation laser can include a Yb:YAG laser. The method can further include initially setting the excitation laser at 1030 nm with a power of 35 W and tuning to 1023 nm to excite close to the E4-E5 transition with a power of 9 W.
(26) In the above embodiments, it will be appreciated that the applicable environment can include any industrial cooling and heating devices, for example, a heat exchanger, steam generator, waste heat recovery device, high temperature equipment, military and aerospace hardware, refrigeration, and similar devices that include liquids such as water and refrigerant.
(27) It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the devices and methods of various embodiments of the invention. Other embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the embodiments disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as examples only. The various embodiments are not necessarily mutually exclusive, as some embodiments can be combined with one or more other embodiments to form new embodiments. The current configuration discussed is one embodiment. Other possible embodiments are envisioned and include, but are not limited to enhanced nucleate boiling and immersion cooling of electronic devices.
(28) It is noted that, as used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms a, an, and the, include plural referents unless expressly and unequivocally limited to one referent. Thus, for example, reference to a wavelength includes two or more different wavelengths. As used herein, the term include and its grammatical variants are intended to be non-limiting, such that recitation of items in a list is not to the exclusion of other like items that can be substituted or other items that can be added to the listed items.