Paper
15 December 2000 Application of Bragg superlattice filters in low-temperature microrefrigerators
Gurgen G. Melkonyan, Armen M. Gulian, Helmut Kroeger
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 4087, Applications of Photonic Technology 4; (2000) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.406447
Event: 2000 International Conference on Application of Photonic Technology (ICAPT 2000), 2000, Quebec City, Canada
Abstract
We propose to use the Bragg interference filter technology for fabrication of microrefrigerators. The idea of using superconductor-insulator-superconductor (SIS) or normal metal-insulator-superconductor (SIN) tunnel junctions as cooling elements in micro-refrigerators is attractive because of the absence of (micro-refrigerators operating below 150 K. There are corresponding experiments [1] on SIN tunnel junctions where an attached to the SIN tunnel junction membrane was cooled down. Theoretical approaches (both phenomenological [1] as well as microscopic [2] show that the cooling effect exists also in 515 tunnel junction. However this was not observed experimentally because of inefficient thermal contact between SIS tunnel junction and the membrane that must be cooled. The microscopic approach to cooling is based on the "phonon deficit effect" [2] in nonequilibrium regime of tunnel junctions. In some circumstances, when the applied voltage does not exceed the superconducting energy gap ( A ) the probability of phonon absorption from the heat-bath is higher than its emission in the nonequilibrium regime of tunnel junctions. There is an appropriate absorption window in the phonon emission spectra [2,3] and by absorbing these phonons from the heat bath the SIS or SIN tunnel junction can refrigerate its environment. This effect can be improved by use of phonon filters placed between the tunnel junction and the heath-bath [4]. Such a filter can be the Bragg interference superlattice (Bragg's grating) which is well studied for problems of optical communications. Bragg interference filters are used also for detection of phonons emitted by tunnel junctions [5]. Usually such filters cut low and high frequencies, and the used detector may detect well separated frequencies. In contrast, to enhance the refrigeration process one needs filters with very broad spectral transmission properties or a large transmission band with one or two narrow stop bands. The type of the needed filter will depend on the types of the used tunnel junction. Corresponding discussion is presented.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Gurgen G. Melkonyan, Armen M. Gulian, and Helmut Kroeger "Application of Bragg superlattice filters in low-temperature microrefrigerators", Proc. SPIE 4087, Applications of Photonic Technology 4, (15 December 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.406447
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KEYWORDS
Phonons

Superconductors

Superlattices

Thermoelectric materials

Optical filters

Acoustics

Absorption

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