Commissioning of a 20 K Helium Refrigeration System for NASA-JSC Chamber AA new 20 K helium refrigerator installed at NASA Johnson Space Center s Space Environment Simulation Laboratory (SESL) was successfully commissioned and tested in 2012. The refrigerator is used to create a deep space environment within SESL s Chamber A to perform ground testing of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The chamber previously and currently still has helium cryo-pumping panels (CPP) and liquid nitrogen shrouds used to create low earth orbit environments. Now with the new refrigerator and new helium shrouds the chamber can create a deep space environment. The process design, system analysis, specification development, and commissioning oversight were performed by the cryogenics department at Jefferson Lab, while the contracts and system installation was performed by the ESC group at JSC. Commissioning data indicate an inverse coefficient of performance better than 70 W/W for a 18 kW load at 20 K (accounting for liquid nitrogen pre-cooling power) that remains essentially constant down to one third of this load. Even at 10 percent of the maximum capacity, the performance is better than 150 W/W at 20 K. The refrigerator exceeded all design goals and demonstrated the ability to support a wide load range from 10 kW at 15 K to 100 kW at 100 K. The refrigerator is capable of operating at any load temperature from 15 K to ambient with tight temperature stability. The new shroud (36 tons of aluminum) can be cooled from room temperature to 20 K in 24 hours. This paper will outline the process design and commissioning results.
Document ID
20130013844
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Homan, J. (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Redman, R. (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Ganni, V. (Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility Newport News, VA, United States)
Sidi-Yekhlef, A. (Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility Newport News, VA, United States)
Knudsen, P. (Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility Newport News, VA, United States)
Norton, R. (Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility Newport News, VA, United States)
Lauterbach, J. (Jacobs Technologies Engineering Science Contract Group Houston, TX, United States)
Linza, R. (Jacobs Technologies Engineering Science Contract Group Houston, TX, United States)
Vargas, G. (Jacobs Technologies Engineering Science Contract Group Houston, TX, United States)