![]() Micro sensor and micro fridge make cool pair |
|
|
April 16, 2008
Researchers at NIST have combined two tiny but powerful NIST inventions on a single microchip, a cryogenic sensor and a microrefrigerator. The combination offers the possibility of cheaper, simpler, and faster precision analysis of materials such as semiconductors and stardust. The NIST team combined a transition-edge sensor (TES), a superconducting thin film that identifies x-ray signatures far more precisely than any other device, with a solid-state refrigerator based on a sandwich of a normal metal, an insulator, and a superconductor. The combo chip, a square about a quarter inch on a side, achieved the first cooling of a fully functional detector (or any useful device) with a microrefrigerator. The researchers also report the greatest temperature reduction in a separate object by microrefrigerators: a temperature drop of 110 mK, or about 0.1ºC.
One promising application is cheaper, simpler semiconductor defect analysis using x-rays. A small company is already commercializing an earlier version of TES technology for this purpose. In another application, astronomical telescopes are increasingly using TES arrays to take pictures of the early universe at millimeter wavelengths. Use of the NIST chips would lower the temperature and increase the speed at which these images could be made, Ullom says. For background on how TESs and microrefrigerators work, see “Copper Ridges Nearly Double X-ray Sensor Performance” (Tech Beat, Nov. 17, 2005), and “Chip-scale Refrigerators Cool Bulk Objects” (Tech Beat, April 21, 2005). www.nist.gov/public_affairs/techbeat/tb2008_0415.htm#microfridge SOURCE: NIST |
|
|
Use of this website is subject to its terms of use. Privacy Policy |