Pasadena, CA - The TMT Refrigeration Cooling System (REFR) will proceed to the Preliminary Design phase next year after successfully passing its Conceptual Design Review closeout meeting on May 3, 2023.
The Review Panel commended "the REFR Team and TIO Systems Engineering for producing an excellent set of documents for the review and answering the questions in a timely manner." The REFR design effort was led by Hainan Zhang at the Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry (TIPC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing.
TMT’s refrigerant cooling system is used for three purposes:
The three CO2 refrigeration units (Ambient, Subzero, and Hydrostatic Bearing System) will be installed at ground level in the summit utility room. A combination of rigid and flexible stainless steel lines will transfer the CO2 liquid (supply) and gas (return) between each refrigeration unit and the system it is cooling. The CO2 and all services required to operate the telescope (power, communications, coolants and others) will be distributed from the utility room to the telescope through the underground service tunnel.
The use of carbon dioxide refrigeration is an important innovation for TMT. Several TMT subsystems, including the telescope bearing oil and the optical enclosure of the NFIRAOS adaptive optics, must be cooled to temperatures which are too low for traditional water/glycol cooling. Refrigeration is also the preferred approach to cool electronics systems located on the top-end of the telescope, where glycol leaks would represent a potential safety issue for the TMT primary mirror.
“We had a great review and successful completion of the REFR conceptual design,” said John Miles, Instrumentation Sr. Systems Engineer at TMT. “It was a nice closeout for the TIPC activity which provided a complete baseline design for the system. TIPC did a great job supporting this effort and filling out TMT’s environmental, technical, functional and operational requirements.”
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