Timeline of low-temperature technology
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The following is a timeline of low-temperature technology and cryogenic technology (refrigeration down to –150 °C, –238 °F or 123 K and cryogenics).[1]
Contents |
[edit] 16th century BCE – 17th century CE
- 1700 BCE – Zimri-Lin, ruler of Mari in Syria commanded the construction of an one of the first ice houses near the Euphrate, additional ice houses built until 17th century CE, i.e. by Tj'n Sje Hwang-ti, ...
- 500 BCE – The yakhchal (meaning "ice pit" in Persian;) is an ancient Persian type of refrigerator. The structure was formed from a mortar resistant to heat transmission, in the shape of a dome. Snow and ice was stored beneath the ground, effectively allowing access to ice even in hot months and allowing for prolonged food preservation. Often a badgir was coupled with the yakhchal in order to cool the refrigerator even further.
[edit] 17th century CE
- 1650 – Otto von Guericke designed and built the world's first vacuum pump and created the world's first ever vacuum known as the Magdeburg hemispheres to disprove Aristotle's long-held supposition that 'Nature abhors a vacuum'.
- 1656 – Robert Boyle and Robert Hooke built an air pump on this design.
- 1662 – Boyle's law (gas law relating pressure and volume) is demonstrated using a vacuum pump
- 1665 – Boyle theorizes a minimum temperature in New Experiments and Observations touching Cold.
- 1679 – Denis Papin – safety valve
[edit] 18th century CE
- 1702 – Guillaume Amontons first calculates absolute zero to be −240 °C using an air thermometer, theorizing at this point the gas would reach zero volume and zero pressure.
- 1756 – The first documented public demonstration of artificial refrigeration by William Cullen[2]
- 1782 – Antoine Lavoisier and Pierre-Simon Laplace invent the ice-calorimeter
- 1784 – Gaspard Monge liquefied the first gas producing liquid sulfur dioxide.
- 1787 – Charles's law (Gas law, relating volume and temperature)
[edit] 19th century CE
- 1802 – John Dalton wrote "the reducibility of all elastic fluids of whatever kind, into liquids"
- 1802 – Gay-Lussac's law (Gas law, relating temperature and pressure).
- 1803 – Domestic ice box
- 1803 – Thomas Moore of Baltimore, Md. received a patent on refrigeration.[3]
- 1805 – Oliver Evans designed the first closed circuit refrigeration machine based on the vapor-compression refrigeration cycle.
- 1809 – Jacob Perkins patented the first refrigerating machine
- 1810 – John Leslie freezes water to ice by using an airpump.
- 1811 – Avogadro's law a gas law
- 1823 – Michael Faraday liquified ammonia to cause cooling
- 1824 – Sadi Carnot– the Carnot Cycle
- 1834 – Ideal gas law
- 1834 – Jacob Perkins obtained the first patent for a vapor-compression refrigeration system.
- 1834 – Jean-Charles Peltier discovers the Peltier effect
- 1844 – Charles Piazzi Smyth proposes comfort cooling[4]
- c.1850 – Michael Faraday makes a hypothesis that freezing substances increases their dielectric constant.
- 1851 – John Gorrie patented his mechanical refrigeration machine in the US to make ice to cool the air[5][6]
- 1856 – James Harrison patented an ether liquid-vapour compression refrigeration system and developed the first practical ice-making and refrigeration room for use in the brewing and meat-packing industries of Geelong, Victoria.
- 1857 – Carl Wilhelm Siemens, the Siemens cycle
- 1858 – Julius Plücker observed for the first time some pumping effect due to electrical discharge.
- 1859 – Ferdinand Carré – The first gas absorption refrigeration system using gaseous ammonia dissolved in water (referred to as "aqua ammonia")
- 1862 – Alexander Carnegie Kirk invents the Air cycle machine
- 1864 – Charles Tellier patented a refrigeration system using dimethyl ether
- 1869 – Charles Tellier installed a cold storage plant in France.
- 1871 – Carl von Linde built his first ammonia compression machine.
- 1876 – Carl von Linde patented equipment to liquefy air using the Joule Thomson expansion process and regenerative cooling[7]
- 1877 – Raoul Pictet and Louis Paul Cailletet, working separately, develop two methods to liquefy oxygen.
- 1879 – Bell-Coleman machine
- 1880 – carbonic acid compression machine
- 1882 – William Soltau Davidson fitted a compression refrigeration unit to the New Zealand vessel Dunedin
- 1883 – Zygmunt Wróblewski condenses experimentally useful quantities of liquid oxygen
- 1885 – Zygmunt Wróblewski published hydrogen's critical temperature as 33 K; critical pressure, 13.3 atmospheres; and boiling point, 23 K.
- 1888 – Loftus Perkins develops the "Arktos" cold chamber for preserving food, using an early ammonia absortion system.
- 1892 – James Dewar invents the vacuum-insulated, silver-plated glass Dewar flask
- 1895 – Carl von Linde files for patent protection of the Hampson–Linde cycle for liquefaction of atmospheric air or other gases (approved in 1903).
- 1898 – James Dewar condenses liquid hydrogen by using regenerative cooling and his invention, the vacuum flask.
- 1900 – Nikola Tesla receives U.S. Patent 685,012, "Means for Increasing the Intensity of Electrical Oscillations". Tesla, also, receives U.S. Patent RE11,865, Method of Insulating Electric Conductors
[edit] 20th century CE
- 1905 – Carl von Linde obtains pure oxygen and nitrogen.
- 1906 – Willis Carrier patents the basis for modern air conditioning.
- 1908 – Heike Kamerlingh Onnes liquefies helium.
- 1911 – Heike Kamerlingh Onnes discloses his research on metallic low-temperature phenomenon characterised by no electrical resistance, calling it superconductivity.
- 1915 – Wolfgang Gaede – the Diffusion pump
- 1920 – Edmund Copeland and Harry Edwards use iso-butane in small refrigerators.
- 1922 – Baltzar von Platen and Carl Munters invent the 3 fluids absorption chiller, exclusively driven by heat.
- 1924 – Fernand Holweck – the Holweckpump
- 1926 – Albert Einstein and Leó Szilárd invent the Einstein refrigerator.
- 1926 – Willem Hendrik Keesom solidifies helium.
- 1926 – General Electric Company introduced the first hermetic compressor refrigerator
- 1933 – William Giauque and others – Adiabatic demagnetization refrigeration
- 1937 – Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa, John F. Allen, and Don Misener discover superfluidity using helium-4 at 2.2 K
- 1937 – Frans Michel Penning invents a type of cold cathode vacuum gauge known as Penning gauge
- 1944 – Manne Siegbahn, the Siegbahn pump
- 1951 – Heinz London invents the principle of the dilution refrigerator
- 1955 – Roots vacuum pump
- 1955 – Willi Becker turbomolecular pump concept[8]
- 1957 – Lewis D. Hall, Robert L. Jepsen and John C. Helmer ion pump based on Penning discharge
- 1959 – Kleemenko cycle
- 1963 – W. Gifford and R. Longsworth invent the pulse tube cooler
- 1972 – David Lee, Robert Coleman Richardson and Douglas Osheroff discover superfluidity in helium-3 at 0.002 K.
- 1973 – Linear compressor
- 1978 – Laser cooling demonstrated in the groups of Wineland and Dehmelt.
- 1986 – Karl Alexander Müller and J. Georg Bednorz discover high-temperature superconductivity
- 1995 – Eric Cornell and Carl Wieman create the first [9] Bose–Einstein condensate, using a dilute gas of Rubidium-87 cooled to 170 nK. Win Nobel Prize for Physics in 2001 for BEC.
[edit] See also
- List of timelines
- Liquefaction of gases
- History of superconductivity
- History of thermodynamics
- Timeline of temperature and pressure measurement technology
- Timeline of thermodynamics, statistical mechanics, and random processes
[edit] References
- ^ Low-temperature technology
- ^ William Cullen, Of the Cold Produced by Evaporating Fluids and of Some Other Means of Producing Cold, in Essays and Observations Physical and Literary Read Before a Society in Edinburgh and Published by Them, II, (Edinburgh 1756)
- ^ 1803 – Thomas Moore
- ^ 1844 – Charles Piazzi Smyth
- ^ 1851 John Gorrie
- ^ 1851 Patent 8080
- ^ Hydrogen through the Nineteenth Century
- ^ Vacuum Science & Technology Timeline
- ^ "New State of Matter Seen Near Absolute Zero". NIST. http://physics.nist.gov/News/Update/950724.html.