23Rd IIR International Congress of Refrigeration
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23rd IIR International Congress of Refrigeration Refrigeration for Sustainable Development Prague, Czech Republic 21-26 August 2011 Volume 1 of 5 ISBN: 978-1-61839-748-5 Printed from e-media with permission by: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. Copyright© (2011) by the International Institute of Refrigeration All rights reserved. Printed by Curran Associates, Inc. (2012) For permission requests, please contact the International Institute of Refrigeration at the address below. International Institute of Refrigeration 177 Boulevard Malesherbes F 75017 Paris France Phone: 33 1 422 73 235 Fax: 33 1 422 31 798 [email protected] Additional copies of this publication are available from: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 USA Phone: 845-758-0400 Fax: 845-758-2634 Email: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com TABLE OF CONTENTS Volume 1 PLENARY LECTURES ADAPTATION OF BUILDINGS AND TECHNOLOGIES FOR SURVIVAL IN A RAPIDLY CHANGING WORLD...............................................................................................................................................................................................................1 Roaf S. REFRIGERATION WITHIN A CLIMATE REGULATORY FRAMEWORK........................................................................................7 Kuijpers L. THE PHENOMENON OF SOLAR COOLING...........................................................................................................................................14 Ziegler F. QUANTUM FLUIDS AT WORK: SUPERCONDUCTIVITY AND HELIUM CRYOGENICS AT THE LARGE HADRON COLLIDER....................................................................................................................................................................................18 Lebrun P. COMPUTATIONAL MODELING IN REFRIGERATION AND FREEZING OF FOODS .................................................................21 Singh R. P. THE COOLING ISSUE IN NUCLEAR REACTORS.................................................................................................................................27 Bestion D. CRYOPHYSICS, CRYOENGINEERING (A1) CRYOGENIC DEVICES AND MEASUREMENTS SCANNING TUNNELING MICROSCOPY AND SPECTROSCOPY IN DILUTION REFRIGERATORS......................................63 Suderow H., Guillamon I., Maldonado A., Vieira S. CRYOGENIC COOLING FOR HIGH POWER LASER AMPLIFIERS ................................................................................................71 Perin J. P., Millet F., Rus B., Divoky M. “COLD PUMP” FOR CRYOGENIC LIQUIDS ..........................................................................................................................................79 Kaiser G., Klupsch M., Schneider M., Klier J., Herzog R. FURTHER MEASUREMENTS ON THE TRIPLE POINT TEMPERATURE OF PURE 20NE AND 22NE: PRELIMINARY RESULTS......................................................................................................................................................................... N/A Pavese F., Steur P. P. M., Giraudi D. CRYOGENIC MATERIALS CRYOGENIC MAGNETOCALORIC EFFECT IN THE FE17 MOLECULAR NANOMAGNET ......................................................85 Gass I. A., Brechin E. K., Evangelisti M. EXPERIMENTAL STUDY OF THE THERMAL CONTACT RESISTANCE AT LOW-TEMPERATURE ....................................92 Bi D., Chen H. NUMERICAL RESOLUTION IN A PCM ACCUMULATOR IN CRYOGENIC CONDITIONS.......................................................99 Morales-Ruiz S., Rigola J., Castro J., Oliva A. EXPERIMENTAL TESTING OF THE FLOW RESISTANCE AND THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY OF POROUS MATERIALS FOR REGENERATORS......................................................................................................................................................107 Yu Z., Saat F. A. Z., Jaworski A. J. INVESTIGATION OF CAPACITANCE SENSOR CS-501 GR UNDER INFLUENCE OF EXTERNAL MAGNETIC FIELD UP TO 2 T ..................................................................................................................................................................115 Eliyashevskyy Yu., Cižmár E., Botko M., Feher A. A METHOD FOR CRYOMATRIX ISOLATION OF METAL POLYAGGREGATES: EXPERIMENT AND RESULTS........................................................................................................................................................................................................121 Aldiyarov A., Drobyshev A., Tokmoldin N. CRYOCOOLERS AND PULSE TUBES COMPUTER SIMULATION OF PERFORMANCE OF STIRLING CRYOCOOLER BASED ON ISOTHERMAL MODEL ..............................................................................................................................................................................126 Qi Y., Zhang H., Chen X., Liu Y. RECUPERATIVE CRYOGENIC HEAT EXCHANGER DESIGN FOR MIXED REFRIGERANT JOULE- THOMSON REFRIGERATOR ...................................................................................................................................................................133 Hwang G., Baek S., Jeong S. PERFORMANCE INVESTIGATION ON 4.0W/60K HIGH FREQUENCY COAXIAL PULSE TUBE CRYOCOOLERS...........................................................................................................................................................................................141 Dang H., Wang L., Yang K. PERFORMANCE INVESTIGATION ON HIGH CAPACITY PULSE TUBE CRYOCOOLERS OPERATING AT 80-100 K ....................................................................................................................................................................................................147 Dang H., Wang L., Yang K. NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF HAMPSON-TYPE MINIATURE JOULETHOMSON CRYOCOOLER ................................. N/A Cui X. Y., Lian D. F., Weng J. H., Wang J. SIMULATIONS IN CRYOGENICS SIMULATION AND ANALYSIS ON HEAT TRANSFER IN LAMINAR OSCILLATORY FLOW IN-TUBE ..............................153 Tang K., Zhang Y., Lei T., Jin T. IMPACT OF LIQUID DENSITY AND VISCOSITY ON THE PERFORMANCE OF A THERMOACOUSTIC ENGINE WITH GAS-LIQUID COUPLING OSCILLATION ................................................................................................................160 Tang K., Lei T., Jin T., Lin X. G. MODELING AND INVESTIGATION OF HEAT EXCHANGE OF HIGH TEMPERATURE SUPERCONDUCTIVE CONDUCTORS IN LIQUID NITROGEN MEDIUM.....................................................................................166 Arkharov I., Navasardyan E., Parkin A. EFFECTS OF VARIABLE THERMOPHYSICAL PROPERTIES ON FLOW AND ENERGY SEPARATION IN A VORTEX TUBE ........................................................................................................................................................................................ N/A Baghdad M., Ouadha A., Addad Y. LIQUEFACTION & SEPARATION OF GASES (A2) LNG LIQUEFACTION (2) EXERGY ANALYSIS OF AN LNG BOG RE-LIQUEFACTION PLANT ........................................................................................... N/A Beladjine M. B., Ouadha A., Benabdesselam Y., Adjlout L. EXERGY AUDITING OF A CASCADE NATURAL GAS LIQUEFACTION PLANT...................................................................... N/A Terrah S. M., Ouadha A. EVALUATION AND SELECTION OF THE PRECOOLING STAGE FOR LNG PROCESSES .....................................................169 Castillo L., Dorao C. A. RARE GASES OPTIMIZATION OF PERIODIC ACTION ADSORBERS GEOMETRY, USED IN THE TECHNOLOGIES OF RARE GASES PURIFICATION..................................................................................................................................................................177 Bondarenko V. L., Simonenko Yu. M., Diachenko O. V., Losyakov I. A. EXPANSION OF NE, KR AND XE PRODUCTION BY USING ALTERNATIVE TECHNOLOGIES OF CONCENTRATES OBTAINING ................................................................................................................................................................183 Bondarenko V. L., Losyakov N. P., Simonenko O. Yu. STUDY OF MIXTURES SEPARATION PROCESSES IN PACKED RECTIFICATION COLUMNS UNDER THE CONDITIONS OF CRYOGENIC TEMPERATURES ...................................................................................................................191 Bondarenko V. L., Simonenko Yu. M., Diachenko T. V. CARBON CAPTURE AND STORAGE (CCS) OPTIMIZED AIR SEPARATION UNITS FOR OXY-COMBUSTION PROCESSES ........................................................................196 Fu C., Gundersen T. OVERVIEW OF CURRENT AND POSSIBLE APPLICATIONS FOR REFRIGERATION TECHNOLOGIES WITHIN CCS .................................................................................................................................................................................................204 Neksa P., Berstad D., Anantharaman R. CO2 CAPTURE BY ANTISUBLIMATION USING INTEGRATED CASCADE SYSTEM ...............................................................212 Clodic D., Younes M., Riachi Y., El Hitti R., Boulawz Ksayer E., Pan X., Yu Y. AIR SEPARATION FOR CCS DESIGN OF AN EXPERIMENTAL SET-UP FOR PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT OF HEAT INTEGRATED AIR DISTILLATION COLUMNS...............................................................................................................................................................219 Van Der Ham L. V., Drescher M., Kjelstrup S. POTENTIAL FOR