Xenon Recirculation-Purification with a Heat Exchanger
K. L. Giboni, E. Aprile, B. Choi, T. Haruyama, R. F. Lang, K. E. Lim,, A. J. Melgarejo, G. Plante

TL;DR
This paper proposes a heat exchanger system for liquid xenon detectors that significantly reduces cooling power requirements during recirculation, enabling faster gas flow rates while maintaining high efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a novel heat exchange method using a commercial heat exchanger to improve recirculation efficiency in large xenon detectors.
Findings
Achieved over 12 SLPM flow rates with 96.8% efficiency.
Demonstrated effective cooling power reduction in large-scale xenon detectors.
Enabled faster recirculation without increased thermal losses.
Abstract
Liquid-xenon based particle detectors have been dramatically growing in size during the last years, and are now exceeding the one-ton scale. The required high xenon purity is usually achieved by continuous recirculation of xenon gas through a high-temperature getter. This challenges the traditional way of cooling these large detectors, since in a thermally well insulated detector, most of the cooling power is spent to compensate losses from recirculation. The phase change during recondensing requires five times more cooling power than cooling the gas from ambient temperature to -100C (173 K). Thus, to reduce the cooling power requirements for large detectors, we propose to use the heat from the purified incoming gas to evaporate the outgoing xenon gas, by means of a heat exchanger. Generally, a heat exchanger would appear to be only of very limited use, since evaporation and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
