July 1, 2018
Journal Article

Characterization of Bypass Fluid Flow in an Active Magnetic Regenerative Liqueer

Abstract

Active magnetic regenerators (AMR) with second order magnetocaloric materials operating below the Curie temperature have a unique property where the magnetized specific heat is lower than the demagnetized specific heat. The associated thermal mass unbalance allows a fraction of heat transfer fluid in the cold heat exchanger to bypass the magnetized regenerator. This cold bypassed fluid can precool a process stream as it returns to the hot side, thereby increasing the efficiency of liquefaction and reducing the cost of liquid cryogens. While researchers have been aware of this phenomenon for decades, experimental performance improvements from bypass fluid flow have yet to be reported in open literature. In the present work, the net cooling power of an active magnetic regenerative liquefier is investigated as a function of the bypass ow fraction. Experiments are performed at a fixed temperature span that yield a 25% improvement in net cooling power, affirming the potential of bypass cooling power.

Revised: April 30, 2019 | Published: July 1, 2018

Citation

Holladay J.D., K.D. Meinhardt, E. Polikarpov, E.C. Thomsen, R.P. Teyber, J. Cui, and J.A. Barclay, et al. 2018. Characterization of Bypass Fluid Flow in an Active Magnetic Regenerative Liqueer. International Journal of Refrigeration. PNNL-SA-130481. doi:10.1016/j.cryogenics.2018.05.010