9–13 Jul 2023
Hawaii Convention Center
US/Hawaii timezone

C2Or3B-04: Compact cryogenic hydrogen test environment for small devices and material characterization

11 Jul 2023, 17:00
15m
315

315

Speaker

Mr Maximilian Grabowski (Technische Universität Dresden, Institute of Power Engineering, Bitzer-Chair of Refrigeration, Cryogenics and Compressor Technology Dresden, Germany)

Description

Currently, there is a great need for testing capabilities for material samples and components in LH2. This includes low temperature compatibility at 20 K, H2 compatibility and possible degradation or permeation effects. The test environment required for this is challenging and quite costly due to LH2 supply. Therefore, an alternative test concept was developed that works autonomously. The required amount of LH2 (typically 2 - 3 l) is generated directly on-site by simple condensation. This is achieved with a power-controlled cryocooler (115 W @ 80 K, 18 W @ 20 K). A cylindrical pressure vessel with an inner diameter of d = 108 mm and a length of approx. 500 mm designed for 0 to 20 barg is used to hold the LH2 bath and the samples. The cryocooler and the sample tube are installed in a common vacuum cryostat and are thermally coupled at the lower end. At the 20 K level, thermal coupling is achieved by a sophisticated thermo syphon arrangement. Hydrogen is taken from a pressure reservoir, pre-cooled at the cryocooler 80 K level, finally injected and liquefied within a couple of hours.

Author

Mr Maximilian Grabowski (Technische Universität Dresden, Institute of Power Engineering, Bitzer-Chair of Refrigeration, Cryogenics and Compressor Technology Dresden, Germany)

Co-authors

Mr Henrik-Gerd Bischoff (Technische Universität Dresden, Institute of Power Engineering, Bitzer-Chair of Refrigeration, Cryogenics and Compressor Technology Dresden, Germany) Mr Christoph Haberstroh (Technische Universität Dresden, Institute of Power Engineering, Bitzer-Chair of Refrigeration, Cryogenics and Compressor Technology Dresden, Germany) Mr Danny Baumann (Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research IFW Dresden, 01069 Dresden, Germany) Mr Dirk Lindackers (Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research IFW Dresden, 01069 Dresden, Germany)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.