The following discussion about cooling PHEMT amplifiers took place in the Moon-Net reflector. I found the subject so interesting that I decided to put together all the messages in this page.
On 9-Mar-1999 G8WRB wrote:
Has anyone ever tried cooling a PHEMT (Pseudomorphic high electron
mobility) FET amplifier, with a view to decreasing the noise figure (NF). I have
this bird-brained idea that there may be reasonably significant gains for modest drops in
temperature (ie 30 deg C or so, that can be achieved with a Peltier cooler). (For those
that done know, a Peltier coolier is like a mini fridge. You apply DC power and one side
gets hot, the other cold. They cost only a few pounds). My reasoning is based on the
physics of PHEMPTs, although I have never looked at it very deeply, or done any
calculations. My basic idea is that for these PHEMPT devices, the NF drops with increasing
electron mobility but electron mobility increases rapidly with decreasing temperature.
If anyone has tried this, or has the necessary equipment to try it, I would be
interested. So I expect would others, as it would cost no more #15 (say $25) to do.
PS: PHEMPT's are sometimes called something else, depending on manufacturer, so the
acronym you know may be a bit different, but the idea is the same.
(N.R.: You can visit G8WRB's web site where there is also a quite a large number of complete Eimac data sheets (not the 2-page summaries on their web site) for a large number of the common tubes used in amateur amplifiers.)
On 10-Mar-1999 K0XP wrote:
Yes; several cooled 1296 preamp experiments was described by Tom
Henderson, WD5AGO, in the 1990 CSVHF Proceedings. I'l attempt to summarize the article's
findings below.
Tom used a Peltier-effect cooler, describing several experiments that took place over a
year or so and whose results were discussed at the 1989 CSVHF conference. Briefly, he
built several preamps and concluded there was insufficient decrease in noise figure to
"...justify a working system,".
But he was also able to have several experimental preamps cryogenically cooled. There was
some thought that perhaps some device types were more responsive to such cooling, so he
also built and tested devices in a test fixture. It should be understood that the preamps
under test were already performing far better than those of the average 1296 EMEer; i.e.,
0.3 dB noise figure. Tom chose 1296 for his tests as the sky temperature is lower than at
432 and so further reduction in noise figure due to the cooling should be more easily
noticeable when pointing at sky noise sources.
The article in the 1990 CSVHF Proceedings contains several charts of noise figure vs.
temperature for several devices, including the MGF1303 (cavity) and the common ATF10135
(series L). The charts for those devices is shown below (note that Tom cautions that each
device was adjusted for a "reasonable" noise figure at Ta and might not have
been the best attainable):
device n/f dbg deg. Kelvin MGF1303 0.62 15.8 298 0.47 17.0 50 ATF10135 0.52 13.5 298 0.33 14.4 100 0.28 14.7 18
Other tests were performed using the test fixture with these devices:
device n/f dbg deg. Kelvin ATF13284 0.60 15.0 295 0.43 16.1 200 ATF10135 0.51 12.2 295 0.38 12.8 200 NE13783 0.64 12.0 295 0.45 13.0 200 MGF1801 0.65 12.5 295 0.56 17.3 200 MGF1412 0.54 14.3 295 0.34 15.6 200 0.27 16.3 100 MGF4303 0.50 16.0 295 HEMT 0.29 17.1 200 w/gnd S. 0.20 17.9 100
For your information, Tom listed the temperatures of some coolants:
Liquid Helium 4K (-455F) " Nitrogen 77K (-320F) Dry Ice 195K (-108F) TED @ Ta 250K (-10F) 4#TEDs 205K (-90F) Freeze Mist 220K (-55F) Room Temp 295K (72F)
TED stands for Thermo-Electric Device, what's called a Peltier Effect cooler. These are
widely available at many of the discount electronics part places such as Hosfelt, for
around US$20 or so.
Tom's findings were that the minimum required cooling was on the order of 100 degrees
Kelvin. He concluded that the most practical method of cooling was probably to use dry ice
on the preamp's device at the feed, although a set of stacked TEDs showed promise; but the
problem with the stack was dissipating the resulting heat. The power consumption of five
stacked coolers was over 200 watts, far too high for a simple heatsink. He says that one
major problem was that the thermal mass of the preamp itself is such that insufficient
cooling of the device results. To that end, he described several methods of cooling the
device while thermally isolating it from the other uncooled preamp components.
Hope this was of help, Dave; and of some interest to the other readers of the reflector. I
have not found any other such articles in my small collection.
On 10-Mar-1999 W3IWI wrote:
Dave -- the basic answer is yes. In addition to the posting on
WD5AGO's work, let me add some comments.
Cooled HEMTs are used all the time in the radio astronomy world. As an example of the
current state-of-the-art, take a look at the plot on cooled FET/HEMT performance on the
NRAO web site at
http://www.cv.nrao.edu/~nbailey/hfet-prf.gif
In my professional life, I have been responsible for the global network of radio
telescopes used in Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) for high accuracy (millimeters
on a global scale) geodetic science (see our web site at http://lupus.gsfc.nasa.gov for some info). The
geodetic VLBI network operates at S-band (2.2-2.4 GHz) and X-band (8.1-8.9 GHz) and all
the stations use HEMTs operating at cryogenic temperatures (~20K). At S-band, the HEMT
LNAs have amplifier noise temperatures < 5K, resulting in Tsys ~30-50K, and at Xband
they contribute ~10K to the ~50K Tsys.
To get the cryogenic temperatures, we use commercial 2- or 3-stage closed- cycle
Joule-Thompson refrigerators. These refrigerators are rather similar to conventional air
conditioners, except that Helium is used as the "working fluid" -- Freon would
freeze hard as a rock! The 1st "warm" stage cools the ~300K ambient temperature
down by a factor ~4-5 to ~60-70K. The 2nd "cold" stage cools the ~60-70K by
another factor of 4-5 to ~15-20K. Some receivers use a 3rd stage to get down to the ~4K
level.
Note that I used absolute temperatures in this description. A large portion of the cooling
improvement comes from the reduction of the kTB noise contribution, where T is the
ABSOLUTE temperature. Thus cooling from ~300K ambient by ~30C (which is also 30K) results
in only a 10% drop in the thermal noise contribution -- hardly worth the effort!
Basically, the solid-state thermionic refrigerators just can't "pump" enough
heat to make a significant improvement.
A much better approach has been used by optical astronomers for years to cool
photomultiplier tubes (see, for example
http://www.photocool.com/dricrf.htm
)
either use Dry Ice purchased at your local Ice Cream store -- it's even advertised at
local "Seven-Eleven" neighborhood stores (see http://www.dels24hours.com/ for an example in the
Tampa, FL area!).
I'll tell an anecdote from ~15 years ago to illustrate how well Dry Ice works. It was at a
Central States meeting with Barry (VE4MA) and I competing to win the 1296 NF contest.
Barry brought his newest FET amplifier built with copper water pipe. I brought a 1420 MHz
LNA we were using for radio astronomy. I put my 21cm LNA into a foam plastic box with only
the coax & bias cables visible and filled the box with dry ice, and let it cool for a
few minutes.
Barry was so proud of his LNA and was CERTAIN he would win. He was showing ~0.5 dB NF and
~20 dB of gain. My "black box" had more that a tenth dB better NF and about 40
dB of gain. It was also broad as a barn, with little difference anywhere in the 1200-1500
MHz range. My only "tweaker" was a gate-voltage bias pot.
Then Barry realized what I had done and decided to cool his LNA. Unfortunately, copper
water pipe presents a huge thermal mass. And since his FET biases were optimezed for
ambient temperatures, his amplifier was a BITCH to tune when it finally got cold. After a
couple of hours of tweaking, Barry matched my LNA and we declared a tie.
So my advice, if you want to get a significant performance improvement, try putting your
LNA into a foam plastic box; the kind that holds a 6-pack of beer is about the right size.
To minimize moisture condensation problems, first dry the amplifier well first, then put
it in your kitchen freezer. While still cold, seal the amplifier from moist air by putting
it into a condom. Depending on how you bias the amplifier, you might want to bring the
bias out separately so you can tweak it cold.
At the bottom of my premature posting was this URL: http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/demerson/
This is the personal homepage for Darrel Emerson, AA7FV/G3SYS at NRAO in Tucson, AZ.
At NRAO, Darrel has done a lot of work on cryogenic amplifiers at millimeter
wavelengths. His personal homepage has some fascinating background info you might find
interesting.
To give you some other pointers to cooled amplifiers, got to the SNAP search engine at
http://snap.com and enter the
search subject field "cooled hemt" including the quotation marks. You will
get back 3 pages of "hits", some of which may be of interest.
On 11-Mar-1999 W3IWI wrote:
I got several replies to my posting. Here are some answers:
(1) Yes, LN2 (Liquid Nitrogen) should work fine. Depending on how the components in
your preamp are held together, there may be some thermal stresses that could break leads
on the HEMT or discrete components. Most of the professional LNAs are built on Teflon PCB
material which seems to be softw enough to absorb most of the stresses. Chip caps have
been known to break loose on cooling. I'd make sure that the amplifier is well sealed so
that the LN2 doesn't flow into the amplifier. Condoms have been used (even though they get
brittle when cold, the do act as a seal). If you are going to use LN2, don't try to use
7805 regulators built into the box -- do all the power conditioning outside the dewar.
(2) Regarding biases: There are two common ways to bias FET/HEMTs.
One way is to self-bias the transistor with a resistor in the source lead. If you do this,
then locate the resistor outside the dewar
because you will have to tweak it!
The second way involves a separate power supply (providing zero current) fed into the
gate. Again locate any power conditioning widgets outside the dewar and be prepared to
tweak the bias voltage.
To answer one question -- these bias/power supplies are just the DC suppllies needed to
make the device operate.They don't add any noise.
ANY semiconductor you use is temperature sensitive and its parameters will change when
cooled. You can demonstrate this with an ordinary LED. Bias it so that it glows dimly at
room temperature and plunge it into LN2. You will be amazed to see how bright it gets,
even at the same current flowing thru the LED.
(3) In general the FET/HEMT devices will perform very well when cold. The internal noise
will drop, and the thermal noise added by the surrounding cold components will also drop.
Early HEMTs had one very strange property. Sometimes when cooled below ~50K, the devices
exhibited a binary on/off mode (you might call it ON/MORON!) -- sometimes a device worked
fine, and other times it died.
This behavior was traced to the fact that a few minority carriers were needed in the
device for it to work. It was found that a little bit of light shined onto the ceramic
case while being cooled would solve the problem. All our HEMT amplifiers have a LED in the
case lid, with the LED in series with the device's drain lead. As noted above, ordinary
LEDs work fine when cold.
On 11-Mar-1999 W8TN wrote:
There is an excellent article in the IV International EME Conference
Proceedings (Trenton, New Jersey) August 10, 11 and 12, 1990, on this subject. The
article is called "Does Cooling Pay?" by Bill, AA4TJ, (now W4TJ.)
Bill goes into great detail in the 35-page article describing work done by NRAO as well as
his own amateur experiments. The article covers suggested devices along with tables
and graphs of various amplifiers and devices at different temperatures. Construction
details of two different types of dewar are also included.
Should anyone want a copy of his article I am sure Bill would be glad to supply one.
His email address is: <wlakatos@nrao.edu>
On 11-Mar-1999 K3PGP wrote:
I did some experiments along these lines many years ago when C-Band
(3.7 to 4.2 Ghz) Satellite TV was still in it's experimental days. Back then you
BUILT your LNA and downconverter as there was nothing available commercially.
My first LNA used biploar transistors. This became the second stage when I was able
to afford a GasFet transistor to use in the front end. I noticed that when the hot
summer sun would beat down on the LNA the noise floor would come up and result in
'sparkles' in the received video as this system was somewhat marginal in SNR and slight
decreases in performance were readily observable. I also noticed that I always got
my best performance on cold days, the colder the better!
I experimented with various sun shields out of aluminum foil. This definitely helped
and I recommend that anyone with a mast mounted preamp try to keep it out of direct
sunlight to prevent heating.
I then began experimenting with some surplus Peltier coolers. The results were
pretty spectacular although I don't have a clue as to what my noise figure was with and
without cooling. All I knew was I could tell just by looking at the picture if the
Peltier was working or not.
One problem I did run into though was moisture condensation inside the LNA. If you are
considering using a Peltier cooler on your preamp you will definitely need to look out for
this. I ended up dumping some of those dehydration crystals (the ones that are blue
and turn pink when damp) inside my pream then sealing it as best I could. Many years
later when I opened the preamp the crystals were still blue so it must have worked!
I suppose a vacuum could also be used to eliminate moisture inside the preamp just
as long as you can maintain a good seal.
I have also experimented with cooling PIN diodes for laser reception. You can find a
graph of these results at the following url along with some other neat data on the home
page.
http://www.qsl.net/k3pgp/Construction/Frontend/frontend2.htm
or
http://www.alltel.net/~k3pgp/Construction/Frontend/frontend2.htm
(Note: I'm not showing any E-Mail
address here in order to avoid them from being collected by SpamBots. You can
possibly find the E-Mail addresses of the above OM at QRZ.COM.)
This discussion is still not closed. If you have any opinions or additional
related information you would like to be published here, just send
me an E-Mail