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Micromachined Joule–Thomson cooling for long-time and precise thermal management.
- Source :
- Review of Scientific Instruments; Aug2024, Vol. 95 Issue 8, p1-8, 8p
- Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Efficient thermal management is essential for low-temperature optoelectronic devices. Traditional liquid nitrogen (LN<subscript>2</subscript>) cooling presents challenges such as frequent replenishment needs and limited operational duration. This study introduces micromachined Joule–Thomson (MJT) cooling as a superior alternative for temperature regulation in optoelectronic devices. We evaluated the thermal and optical performance of MJT cooling for a CdSe/ZnS quantum dot (QD) sample within a temperature range of 120–300 K. Thermal analysis showed that with a single 50 l nitrogen refill, the MJT system can operate continuously for over one week, surpassing the LN<subscript>2</subscript> system by 11 times. The temperature stability was affected little by laser irradiation, with a <0.2 K rise at 5 mW of laser power. In addition, the MJT cooling led to an average blueshift of 1–3 meV in the emission peak of QDs and 0.3–2.3 meV reduced spectral broadening compared to LN<subscript>2</subscript>, attributed to a smaller sample-to-cold-stage temperature gap of about 8–9 K in the MJT setup. The standard deviations of peak energy and FWHM are in the order of E − 1 meV magnitude, demonstrating a comparable thermal uniformity compared to LN<subscript>2</subscript>. The vibration spectra obtained for both vertical and horizontal directions reveal the superior low-vibration characteristics of MJT cooling. These findings validate MJT cooling as a superior and reliable strategy for the thermal management of optoelectronics, ensuring prolonged operational durations, reliable temperature stability, enhanced temperature precision, high thermal homogeneity, and low vibrations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00346748
- Volume :
- 95
- Issue :
- 8
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- Review of Scientific Instruments
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 179372594
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0214551