-40 to 70C Degrees Special Refrigerator

AI Thread Summary
A user is seeking a specialized refrigeration device capable of operating between -40°C and 70°C for laboratory sensor testing. The discussion highlights the importance of specifying the required volume and budget, with suggestions that a combination of a refrigerator and incubator might be more practical. Alternatives such as modifying a standard ultra-low temperature freezer or looking for stability chambers are also proposed. Users recommend searching for climate or environmental chambers, which may meet the temperature requirements but could be costly. The conversation emphasizes the need for precise specifications to find suitable equipment.
ervays
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
Hi all,

I'm trying to find a special refrigeration device that can goes from -40 Degrees to 70 degrees. I need this machine for a laboratory to test sensors in differente temperatures.

Does anyone knows where can I find something like that?

Kind Regards
Vicente
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
What is your budget? What volume of air do you want to temperature control? I assume you mean degrees C.
 
@ervays

In this and in your previous thread your questions are just too vague to answer properly .

Please tell us exactly what you are trying to do .
 
lewando said:
What is your budget? What volume of air do you want to temperature control? I assume you mean degrees C.
Budget is not a real problem, the cheaper the better but this is for a laboratory. I'm just going to make a budget.

About the space, you are right I didn't mention it. I want to have a inner space about 50 cm H,W,D.

I just want to place a vacuum chamber inside the incubator.

Cheers
 
Does the same device need to do both -40 and +70? I think it would be cheaper and easier if you could have a refrigerator and an incubator next to each other.
 
Bandit127 said:
Does the same device need to do both -40 and +70? I think it would be cheaper and easier if you could have a refrigerator and an incubator next to each other.
Yes, it should. Cause it is for the study of the behaviour of the sensors when the temperature changes. But some device from 0 to 60 could work. Minus degrees is the ideal device.

This is all about a name I can start looking with. I've found on some websites a lab equipment called incubator. But all the options I've found are really small. I'm looking for something similar but with a bigger chamber.

Thanks all for the replys!
 
Can you have any kind of heat transfer, hot or cold, in a vacuum??
 
Never to Old said:
Can you have any kind of heat transfer, hot or cold, in a vacuum??
Radiant?
 
ervays said:
Hi all,

I'm trying to find a special refrigeration device that can goes from -40 Degrees to 70 degrees. I need this machine for a laboratory to test sensors in differente temperatures.

Does anyone knows where can I find something like that?

Kind Regards
Vicente
We use Sun ovens in our Lab at my work, and we've been happy with the ovens and Sun's customer service:

http://www.sunelectronics.com/

If you can live with a low temperature limit of -30C, you can use their refrigeration-based chambers:

http://www.sunelectronics.com/Temperature-Chamber-Refrigeration-Model.html

If you really need -40C, you will likely need liquid CO2 based cooling:

http://www.sunelectronics.com/Temperature-Chamber-EC1X-Model.html
 
  • #10
OmCheeto said:
Radiant?
You're going to make me do an experiment to find out aren't you.. I am not sure Radiant Transfer will work since there is nothing in a vacuum for the radiant source to act upon... I am new here, but I'm liking this site a whole bunch... It makes me think.. The more you know, the more you'll realize you don't know...
 
  • #11
Never to Old said:
You're going to make me do an experiment to find out aren't you.. I am not sure Radiant Transfer will work since there is nothing in a vacuum for the radiant source to act upon...
If radiant heat transfer doesn't work in a vacuum, please come up with an independent theory which explains how the sun warms the earth. :doh: :oldwink:

I am new here, but I'm liking this site a whole bunch... It makes me think.. The more you know, the more you'll realize you don't know...

This is why many of us roll our eyes at newbies who show up and complain that the Forum won't allow them to share their very independent theories. Regular physics is hard enough to comprehend, even without the distractions of alt-physics.
 
  • #12
Never to Old said:
Im not sure Radiant Transfer will work since there is nothing in a vacuum for the radiant source to act upon...
I'd assume that they would have something in the vacuum that they want to heat, so the radiant energy would need to be absorbed by that object (preferably some dark colored object)...
 
  • #13
OmCheeto said:
If radiant heat transfer doesn't work in a vacuum, please come up with an independent theory which explains how the sun warms the earth. :doh: :oldwink:
This is why many of us roll our eyes at newbies who show up and complain that the Forum won't allow them to share their very independent theories. Regular physics is hard enough to comprehend, even without the distractions of alt-physics.
Not all the technology we have today is here because inventors followed the rules of physics, it is here because inventors were not afraid to step outside the box.. I agree that regular physics is challenging to learn and can be even more challenging to master.. So then you will be content to learn the psychical science as it is taught and never challenge your mind to go beyond ?? I would hope not..

So in answer to your question; have you studied the properties of Light, Electromagnetic Radiation as it is knowm?? "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light" gives a pretty good basic explanation, it has a psychical property to it.. Remember also that light is not the only source of heat and cold is merely the absence of heat..
 
Last edited:
  • #14
Never to Old said:
Not all the technology we have today is here because inventors followed the rules of physics, it is here because inventors were not afraid to step outside the box.
No invention ever broke the laws of physics. And to think outside the box, you first need to know where the edges of the box are.

In any case, PhysicsForums is not the place for this. We are mostly there to help students (formal and informal) to learn.

Never to Old said:
So in answer to your question; have you studied the properties of Light, Electromagnetic Radiation as it is knowm?? "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light" gives a pretty good basic explanation, it has a psychical property to it.
Psychical?

Never to Old said:
Remember also that light is not the only source of heat and cold is merely the absence of heat..
I'm quite sure that @OmCheeto, as well as the others who have replied to the OP, know that quite well.
 
  • Like
Likes russ_watters and OmCheeto
  • #15
Climate chamber / environmental chamber are keywords to look for. The large size is more problematic than the temperature range. If your device is inside a vacuum chamber anyway, there could be cheaper ways to achieve a stable temperature.
Examples found with a quick google search: http://www.lib-industry.com/products-show.php?id=2, two, three, four - there are certainly more options. Those things are expensive, and your budget won't be infinite.
 
  • Like
Likes ervays
  • #16
In addition to what @mfb said, another key word to try is "stability chamber". A quick google finds one capable of -20 to +200C. You might be able to do better.

Also, you could just make some minor modifications to a standard ULT(-85C) freezer to add warming capability. With the freezer function shut off, it is just a well-insulated box. Add a little heater and temperature controller and now it's a warm environmental chamber.

And if money is really not an object (people say it, but it isn't true), you could probably get a manufacturer to custom make you a chamber to suit your needs.
 
  • Like
Likes ervays
  • #17
russ_watters said:
And if money is really not an object (people say it, but it isn't true)
That is so true.

A colleague's girlfriend came to our lab one day and asked us to help her pick out a computer for her lab. Her boss had told her that money was no object. In 10 minutes we had identified a great computer for her boss.

The next day she came back with a target budget.
 
  • Like
Likes CWatters and russ_watters
  • #18
Dale said:
A colleague's girlfriend came to our lab one day and asked us to help her pick out a computer for her lab. Her boss had told her that money was no object. In 10 minutes we had identified a great computer for her boss.
Oh, that sounds like fun! Like the way I fantasize about the observatory I'll build myself when I win the lottery or sell my company (note to self: start a company) for a billion dollars!
 
  • #19
"What? My lab computer controlling a few power supplies totally needs 30 GB of RAM!"
You shouldn't spend time wondering if you can get some random resistor in your $1 million experiment a dollar cheaper, but a climate chamber can easily be in the 5-digit range, and if you can save $10,000 you will always make someone happy.
 
  • Like
Likes russ_watters

Similar threads

Replies
6
Views
4K
Replies
11
Views
5K
Replies
8
Views
3K
Replies
1
Views
2K
Back
Top