Abstract:
An NMR spectrometer comprising a magnet coil system disposed in the helium tank ( 8 ) of a cryostat and an NMR probe head ( 4 ) which is disposed in a room temperature bore of the cryostat and contains a cooled RF resonator ( 13 ) for receiving NMR signals from a sample to be examined, wherein the helium tank ( 8 ) and the NMR probe head ( 4 ) are cooled by a common, multi-stage, compressor-operated refrigerator, is characterized in that the common refrigerator comprises a cold head ( 6 ) and several heat exchangers ( 21, 24, 25, 28, 31, 33, 34 ) at different temperature levels, wherein the refrigerator is disposed at a spatial separation from the cryostat in a separate, evacuated and thermally insulated housing ( 5 ), and several cooling circuits ( 1   a,    1   b,    1   c,    1   d,    2   a,    2   b,    3   a,    3   b ) having thermally insulated transfer lines ( 14   a,    14   b,    15 ) are provided between the housing ( 5 ) containing the heat exchangers ( 21, 24, 25, 28, 31, 33, 34 ) and the cryostat, and also between the housing ( 5 ) and the NMR probe head ( 4 ). The probe head and magnet cryostat of the inventive NMR spectrometer can thereby be cooled by a common refrigerator, wherein the cooling resources of the used refrigerator are optimally utilized.

Description:
[0001]     This application claims Paris Convention priority of DE 10 2004 053 972.3 filed Nov. 09, 2004 the complete disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.  
       BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION  
       [0002]     The invention concerns an NMR spectrometer comprising a magnet coil system which is disposed in the helium tank of a cryostat, and an NMR probe head which is disposed in a room temperature bore of the cryostat and contains a cooled RF resonator for receiving NMR signals from a sample to be examined, wherein the helium tank and the NMR probe head are cooled by a common, multi-stage, compressor-operated refrigerator.  
         [0003]     A device of this type is disclosed in WO 03/023433 A1.  
         [0004]     The NMR probe head of an NMR spectrometer is located, together with a measuring device, in the bore of a magnet cryostat. This magnet cryostat contains a superconducting coil which generates the magnetic field required for NMR measurements. The NMR probe head as well as the magnet cryostat must be kept at very low temperatures during operation. The thermal loss caused by thermal conduction and thermal radiation is therefore a problem.  
         [0005]     For this reason, a refrigerator is conventionally provided for cooling the NMR probe head. Heat exchangers and a transfer line from the refrigerator to the NMR probe head transfer the cooling power generated by the refrigerator (U.S. Pat. No. 5,889,456). The NMR probe head is supplied with coolant through pumps or compressors via the transfer lines. The cooled components of the probe head are usually at temperatures of 10 to 60 Kelvin. A Gifford-MacMahon cooler (GM) or pulse tube cooler (PT) is e.g. used as refrigerator.  
         [0006]     The magnet cryostat of an NMR spectrometer comprises a helium tank which contains the superconducting magnet and liquid helium (4.2 K), one or more radiation shields surrounding the helium tank, an outer vacuum container which is subsequently referred to as the outer shell, and one or more neck tubes which connect the helium tank to the outer shell. The radiation shields may also be containers which are filled with liquid nitrogen (77.3 K) to reduce the heat input into the helium tank. Helium and nitrogen are evaporated by the heat input into the helium tank and on the radiation shield which results from radiation and thermal conduction of the neck tubes and further suspension means. To prevent evaporation of expensive helium and nitrogen, refrigerators (PT or GM coolers) are also used to cool magnet cryostats.  
         [0007]     It is thereby also possible to connect the refrigerator to the magnet cryostat via transfer lines. The transfer line between the refrigerator and the cryostat must, however, be highly efficient to transfer the thermal flows with little loss. The structure of this design is less compact and it is therefore not used in modern magnet cryostats.  
         [0008]     It has proven to be useful to install the cold finger directly in the magnet cryostat. The cold finger is thereby connected to one or more shields in the cryostat and/or condenses evaporated helium in the helium tank. This method is advantageous in that direct cooling is more efficient than external arrangement of the refrigerator and transport of the coolant via a transfer line. A design of this type is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,389,821. In this method, more helium is condensed than evaporated. For this reason, part of the cooling power must be compensated for by an electric heating means. In this case, part of the cooling power is also “wasted”, without being used.  
         [0009]     WO 03/023433 A1 therefore proposes use of the cold finger of the refrigerator which is installed in the magnet cryostat not only for cooling the cryostat but also for cooling the NMR probe head. The installation of the refrigerator in the magnet cryostat, however, entails considerable disadvantages. The generally magnetic regenerator material is located within the stray field of the NMR magnet coil and therefore generates magnetic disturbances. The vibrations which are caused directly by the refrigerator deteriorate the measuring conditions. Moreover, the limited space within the magnet cryostat prohibits arbitrary positioning of the heat exchangers, which limits the possibility of setting the pre-cooling temperature. For this reason, these devices frequently fail to reach an optimum cooling operation. A considerable part of the input power of the cooler, which is approximately 4 to 8 kW, is still lost in these conventional devices.  
         [0010]     It is therefore the underlying purpose of the invention to propose an NMR spectrometer with which the probe head and magnet cryostat are cooled by a common refrigerator, wherein the cooling resources of the refrigerator are optimally utilized while minimizing the disturbances in the working volume caused by the refrigerator.  
       SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
       [0011]     This object is achieved in accordance with the invention in that the common refrigerator comprises a cold head and several heat exchangers at different temperature levels, wherein the refrigerator is disposed at a spatial separation from the cryostat in a separate, evacuated and thermally insulated housing, and several cooling circuits with thermally insulated transfer lines are provided between the housing containing the heat exchangers and the cryostat and also between the housing and the NMR probe head.  
         [0012]     The overall cooling power is generated outside of the cryostat by a refrigerator and is transferred using suitable coolants via an insulated transfer line to the components to be cooled. This prevents mechanical and magnetic disturbances of the magnetic field by the refrigerator and also permits utilization of the excess energy produced in the different cooling circuits for cooling further cooling circuits. Moreover, the more variable arrangement of the heat exchangers permits more effective setting of the pre-cooling temperature to save energy.  
         [0013]     This arrangement is therefore much more effective and less expensive compared with a cold head integrated in a cryostat as described e.g. in WO03/023433 A1 and also compared with the arrangement disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,889,456 which provides separate refrigerators for cooling the NMR probe head and the cryostat. It is thereby possible to save up to 100% of the input power and purchasing costs.  
         [0014]     In a preferred embodiment of the present NMR spectrometer, the thermally insulated transfer lines of the cooling circuits have a common thermally insulated line section which comprises at least 50%, in particular at least 70%, preferably approximately 90% of the overall length of the transfer lines. This reduces the temperature loss during transfer of the coolant to the objects to be cooled.  
         [0015]     In one particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, the transfer line which is at the lowest energy level is thermally shielded within the common line section by at least one radiation shield at a higher energy level. The transfer line with the lowest energy level is thereby subjected to a reduced temperature difference which reduces the energy loss and the line section insulation requirements.  
         [0016]     In a particularly advantageous manner, the transfer lines are disposed coaxially, wherein the transfer line with the lowest energy level is in the center of the arrangement.  
         [0017]     In a preferred embodiment, the transfer lines have vibration-damping components for decoupling the refrigerator from the NMR probe head or the refrigerator from the cryostat. The quality of the NMR measurements is thereby improved.  
         [0018]     Two cooling circuits are advantageously provided between the housing and the cryostat, one cooling circuit of which has a temperature level of approximately 77 K. It may cool a radiation shield or a nitrogen tank.  
         [0019]     It is moreover advantageous to also provide two cooling circuits between the housing and the NMR probe head, one cooling circuit having a temperature level of approximately 77 K. A pre-amplifier of the NMR probe head may e.g. be cooled by a cooling circuit of this type.  
         [0020]     The cooling circuits which have a temperature level of approximately 77 K are thereby preferably operated with liquid nitrogen (═LN2) coolant. The nitrogen is condensed at the cold head and is guided in liquid form through the transfer line, thereby increasing the average transfer temperature of the cooling power and improving the efficiency.  
         [0021]     In a particularly advantageous manner, one of the cooling circuits between the housing and the cryostat has a temperature level of approximately 4 K and is operated with liquid helium (═LHe) as coolant. It may cool e.g. a helium tank located in the cryostat.  
         [0022]     In a particularly preferred embodiment of the inventive NMR spectrometer, the common refrigerator comprises a regenerator along which at least one coolant is guided to pre-cool this coolant to a defined temperature. One of the heat exchangers can therefore be omitted. It is also possible to individually adjust the temperature of the coolant through selecting the length of the contact surface between transfer line and the regenerator.  
         [0023]     This can be realized in a particularly good manner if the common refrigerator is a pulse tube cooler. Mounting of the transfer lines to the stationary regenerator tube of a pulse tube cooler is thereby considerably facilitated as is the temperature exchange compared to a movable regenerator of a Gifford-McMahon cooler for which this arrangement would be difficult to realize.  
         [0024]     In a special embodiment of the inventive NMR spectrometer, the cryostat contains a helium tank and a Joule-Thomson valve which is disposed in the helium tank and is integrated in one of the cooling circuits. In this Joule-Thomson valve, the helium flow is further cooled due to adiabatic relaxation to cool the helium tank, and is partially liquefied. The temperature after relaxation is lower than the temperature of the second stage of the refrigerator, e.g. 6 Kelvin at the refrigerator and 4.2 K downstream of the Joule-Thomson valve. The second refrigerator stage can accept a considerably larger amount of power in consequence of this temperature increase, compared to cooling of the coolant to 4.2 K without a Joule-Thomson valve (100-300%). The NMR probe head usually requires more power in the lower temperature range than the helium tank of the cryostat. Moreover, it is not necessary to cool the NMR probe head to 4.2 K. The Joule-Thomson valve can split the power of the second stage into two temperature levels. The effectivity of the overall system is thereby considerably improved. In a particularly advantageous manner, the housing containing the cold head and the heat exchangers is disposed above the cryostat. In this arrangement, the pump for circulating the coolant and the associated valves can be omitted due to gravity and inherent convection of the coolant. No additional heat is input through pump operation and the efficiency of the overall apparatus is increased.  
         [0025]     Furthermore, it may also be advantageous for the refrigerator compressor to also drive at least one of the cooling circuits.  
         [0026]     Further advantages of the invention can be extracted from the description and the drawing. The features mentioned above and below may be used individually or collectively in arbitrary combination. The embodiments shown and described are not to be understood as exhaustive enumeration but have exemplary character for describing the invention. 
     
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING  
       [0027]      FIG. 1  shows a schematic view of an embodiment of the inventive arrangement;  
         [0028]      FIG. 2  shows a schematic view of a further embodiment of the inventive arrangement in accordance with  FIG. 1  with a common transfer line section;  
         [0029]      FIG. 3  shows a schematic view of an embodiment of the inventive arrangement with a cooling circuit operated with nitrogen and a Joule-Thomson valve which is integrated in one of the cooling circuits and pre-cooling of the coolant along the regenerator of the second refrigerator stage; and  
         [0030]      FIG. 4  shows a schematic view of a further embodiment of the inventive arrangement with two cooling circuits for cooling the NMR probe head. 
     
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT  
       [0031]     The figures explained below show different embodiments of the inventive NMR spectrometer with associated cooling circuits  1   a,    1   b,    1   c,    1   d,    2   a,    2   b,    3   a,    3   b.  The NMR spectrometer also comprises a cryostat, an NMR probe head  4  and a cold head  6  of a refrigerator which is preferably designed as a pulse tube cooler and disposed in a separate evacuated and thermally insulated housing  5  to prevent thermal input through convection and gas heat conduction. The drawings do not show the insulation from thermal radiation.  
         [0032]     The essential components of the cryostat are an outer shell  7  and a helium tank  8  which contains a superconducting magnet and liquid helium (4.2 K), a nitrogen tank  9  which contains liquid nitrogen and one or more neck tubes  10  which connect the helium tank  8  to the outer shell  7 . The nitrogen tank  9  also comprises one or more neck tubes  11  of this type.  
         [0033]     The NMR probe head  4  contains the resonator  13  and the pre-amplifier  12 . Each coolant is transported through vacuum-insulated transfer lines  14 ,  15 . These lines  14 ,  15  may have a length of several meters and are illustrated with greatly reduced length. The NMR probe head  4  may be connected in many different ways (see U.S. Pat. No. 5,889,456). In the present variants, the simplest connections are illustrated.  
         [0034]     The embodiment of  FIG. 1  of the inventive NMR spectrometer comprises three cooling circuits  1   a,    2   a,    3   a  for cooling the NMR probe head  4  and/or re-condensating gases evaporating in the nitrogen tank  9  or helium tank  8 . Cooling circuit  1   a  supplies the NMR probe head  4 , cooling circuit  2   a  supplies the nitrogen tank  9 , and cooling circuit  3   a  supplies the helium tank  8  of the cryostat with coolant. A compressor  16  condenses the helium used as coolant for the cold head  6  and the cooling circuits  1   a,    2   a  of the NMR probe head  4  and the nitrogen tank  9  of the magnet cryostat. A second compressor or a pump  17  drives the cooling circuit  3   a  for the helium tank  8  of the magnet cryostat. This is required, since the pressure on the low-pressure side of the first compressor  16  (usually approximately 5 bars) is above the critical pressure for helium. For this reason, it would not be possible to keep a liquid helium supply in the helium tank  8 . The flow rate of the cooling circuits  1   a,    2   a,    3   a  is regulated by valves  18 ,  19 ,  20 .  
         [0000]     Cooling Circuit  1   a  of the NMR Probe Head  4 :  
         [0035]     For cooling the NMR probe head  4 , a coolant (He gas flow in the present example) at room temperature enters the housing  5  downstream of the compressor  16  and is pre-cooled in a heat exchanger  21  in counter flow with the gases flowing out of the NMR probe head  4  and the nitrogen coolant. The coolant is further cooled and liquefied in the heat exchangers  24 ,  25  connected to the first stage  22  and second stage  23  of the cold head  6 . The helium used as coolant then has a temperature of approximately 4.2 K. After passage through the transfer line  14   b,  the helium is heated in the resonator  13  and subsequently in the pre-amplifier  12  to approximately 70 to 90 K and cools the NMR resonator  13  to approximately 6 to 20 K and the pre-amplifier  12  to approximately 70 K. The coolant is returned to the housing  5  through the transfer line  14   a,  where it is mixed with the cooling gas of the nitrogen coolant from the cooling circuit  2   a  and is subsequently heated in the heat exchanger  21  to just below the ambient temperature (approximately 290 K) and returned to the compressor  16 .  
         [0000]     Cooling Circuit  2   a  of the Nitrogen Tank  9 :  
         [0036]     In the cooling circuit  2   a,  a coolant flow (He gas flow in the present example) at room temperature (approximately 300 K) enters the housing  5  downstream of the compressor  16  and is pre-cooled in the heat exchanger  21  in counter flow with the gases flowing out of the NMR probe head  4  and the nitrogen coolant and is further cooled in the heat exchanger  24  connected to the first stage  22  of the cold head  6  to a temperature below 77 K (preferably approximately 55 K). After passage through the transfer line  15 , the helium passes through a heat exchanger  26 . The heat exchanger  26  is located in the nitrogen gas and re-liquefies gaseous nitrogen. The coolant of the cooling circuit  2   a  accepts heat from the nitrogen tank  9  and returns to the housing  5  via the transfer line  15 , where it is mixed with the cooling gas for cooling the NMR probe head from the cooling circuit  1   a  and is subsequently heated in the heat exchanger  21  to just below the ambient temperature and returned to the compressor  16 .  
         [0000]     Cooling Circuit  3   a  of the Helium Tank  8 :  
         [0037]     In the cooling circuit  3   a,  helium evaporating from the helium tank  8  is repumped. The He gas flow at room temperature enters the housing  5  downstream of the pump  17 , is pre-cooled in the heat exchanger  24  and is further cooled and liquefied (approximately 4.2 K) in the heat exchanger  25 . After passage through the transfer line  15 , the liquid helium enters the helium tank  8 . The helium gas evaporating from the helium tank escapes through the neck tube  10 , is heated to room temperature, and is returned to the pump  17 . The helium evaporating from the helium tank  8  may additionally also cool a radiation shield or the neck tubes  10 .  
         [0038]      FIG. 2  shows an embodiment of the inventive NMR spectrometer, wherein the transfer lines  14   a,    14   b,    15 , which are separate in  FIG. 1 , have a common line section  27 . The transfer lines can thereby be disposed in such a manner that the warmer sections of the cooling circuits can shield the colder ones from room temperature along a major part of the overall length of the transfer lines  14   a,    14   b,    15 . This may be realized e.g. by coaxial arrangement of the transfer lines  14   a,    14   b,    15  or through a suitable arrangement of radiation shields which surround the transfer line at the lowest energy level. In this manner, the coolants can be transferred along the path between the housing  5  and the cryostat or between the housing  5  and the NMR probe head  4 , thereby minimizing the temperature loss.  
         [0039]      FIG. 3  shows a further embodiment of the inventive NMR spectrometer with cooling circuits  1   b,    2   b,    3   b  which are modified compared to  FIG. 1 .  
         [0000]     Cooling Circuit  1   b  of the NMR Probe Head  2 :  
         [0040]     Like in the embodiment of  FIG. 1 , in the present embodiment, the He gas flow at room temperature enters the housing  5  downstream of the compressor  16  and is pre-cooled in the heat exchanger  21  in counter flow with the gases flowing out of the NMR probe head  4 , and is subsequently cooled in the heat exchanger  24  which is connected to the first stage  22  of the cold head  6 . The coolant is further cooled by a heat exchanger  28  connected to the second stage  23  of the cold head  6 . The heat exchanger  28  is thereby connected to the regenerator tube of the second stage  23  of the cold head  6  and does not guide the helium to the cold end of the second stage  23  of the cold head  6  but merely to a location where the coolant has a temperature suitable for cooling the NMR probe head  4 . After passage through the transfer line  14   b,  the helium is heated in the resonator  13  and subsequently in the pre-amplifier  12  to approximately 70 to 100 K and is returned to the housing  5  via the transfer line  14   a  where it is heated in the heat exchanger  21  to just below the ambient temperature and returned to the compressor  16 . Due to the freely selectable length of the contact surfaces between the coolant and regenerator, the pre-cooling temperature of the coolant can be optimally adjusted to the desired application. This temperature adjustment is possible only if the refrigerator is externally disposed as proposed in the present invention and cannot be realized with a refrigerator which is integrated in the cryostat, due to the limited space.  
         [0000]     Cooling Circuit  2   b  of the Nitrogen Tank  9 :  
         [0041]     In the cooling circuit  2   b  of  FIG. 2 , nitrogen gas flow is used to cool the nitrogen tank  9 . The nitrogen gas flow at room temperature enters the housing  5  downstream of a pump  29  and is cooled and liquefied in the heat exchanger  24 . After passage through the transfer line  15 , the liquid nitrogen flows into the nitrogen tank  9 , where it is evaporated through the thermal energy introduced in the nitrogen tank, leaves the magnet cryostat through the neck tube  11  and returns to the pump  29 . The mass flow is adjusted by the valve  30 . Due to use of nitrogen as coolant, the coolant is transferred through the transfer line  15  in a liquid state, which increases the average transfer temperature of the cooling power, improves the efficiency and reduces the consumption of expensive helium. However, an additional pump  29  and a valve  30  are required for repumping the nitrogen.  
         [0000]     Cooling Circuit  3   b  of the Helium Tank  8 :  
         [0042]     As described already in connection with the cooling circuit  1   b,  the helium gas required for the cooling circuit  3   b  may also be cooled by a heat exchanger  31 , which is connected to the second stage  23  of the cold head  6 , to a defined temperature and be liquefied after precooling by the heat exchanger  24 . After passage through the transfer line  15 , the liquid helium is expanded into the helium tank  8  via the Joule-Thomson valve  32 , where it is evaporated. The helium gas subsequently flows through the neck tube  10 , is heated to room temperature and is returned to the pump  17 . Due to the expansion of the helium gas via the Joule-Thomson valve  32 , additional heat is withdrawn from the helium in the helium tank, thereby increasing the cooling power of the cooling circuit  3   b.  It would be theoretically possible to use a less powerful refrigerator for the cooling circuit  3   b.  In practice, the cooling power obtained in this manner is utilized to increase the power supply to the cooling circuit  1   b  of the NMR probe head. Moreover, the compressor for the Joule-Thomson valve  32  also draws considerably less power (less than 10%) than the compressor of the refrigerator.  
         [0043]      FIG. 4  shows an embodiment of the inventive NMR spectrometer, wherein the resonator  13  and the pre-amplifier  12  of the NMR probe head  4  are cooled using two separate cooling circuits  1   d,    1   c.    
         [0000]     Cooling Circuit  1   c  of the Pre-Amplifier  12 :  
         [0044]     Analogously to the cooling circuit  2   a  of the nitrogen tank  9 , the coolant at room temperature enters the housing  5  downstream of the compressor  16  and is pre-cooled in the heat exchanger  21  in counter flow with the gases flowing out of the NMR probe head  4  and the nitrogen coolant, and is cooled in the heat exchanger  24  connected to the first stage  22  of the cold head  6  to a temperature below 77 K (preferably approximately 55 K). The coolant is not further cooled within the cooling circuit  1   c.  Nitrogen would be suitable as a coolant for this cooling circuit  1   c,  since nitrogen is in its liquid state at this temperature. After passage through the transfer line  14   a,  the coolant is heated in the pre-amplifier  12  to approximately 70 to 100 K and returned to the housing  5  through the transfer line  14   a  where it is heated in the heat exchanger  21  to just below the ambient temperature, and returned into the compressor  16 .  
         [0000]     Cooling Circuit  1   d  of the Resonator  13 :  
         [0045]     Cooling of the resonator  13  requires lower temperatures than cooling of the pre-amplifier  12 . For this reason, after passage through the heat exchanger  24  which is connected to the first stage  22  of the cold head  6 , the coolant is cooled in a further heat exchanger  33  by the return flow of the coolant to a temperature of approximately 18 K, and in a heat exchanger  34  which is connected to the regenerator tube, to the desired temperature of approximately 6K, before it reaches the resonator  13  via the transfer line  14   b.  The coolant flows back through the transfer line  14   b  and the heat exchangers  24 ,  21  which are at a higher temperature level, such that the coolant can accept heat from the inflowing coolant while returning to the compressor  16 .  
         [0046]     The nitrogen tank of the NMR spectrometer shown in  FIG. 4  is cooled analogously to the cooling circuit  2   a  of  FIG. 2 . The cooling circuit  3   b  of the helium tank, however, corresponds to the one of  FIG. 3 .  
         [0047]     The features of the individual cooling circuits  1   a,    1   b,    1   c,    1   d,    2   a,    2   b,    3   a,    3   b  can, of course, be combined in different ways. In particular, the advantages of all embodiments of the invention can be utilized with particular advantage if the transfer lines  14   a,    14   b,    15  have a common line section  27  as is exemplarily shown in  FIG. 2 , thereby realizing particularly effective coolant transfer.  
         [0048]     Due to external arrangement of the refrigerator, the inventive device is a system which is extremely insensitive to disturbances. Since the refrigerator is located at a relatively large separation from the working volume of the NMR spectrometer, mechanical and also magnetic disturbances caused e.g. by the regenerator material are not transferred to the magnet coil system. The regenerator material can therefore be selected more freely to optimize cooling. In addition to effective cooling, the inventive device therefore also achieves good homogeneity of the magnetic field within the working volume of the NMR spectrometer. The shape and dimensions of the regenerator tube of the inventive external arrangement can, in principle, be freely selected due to the relaxed geometric boundary conditions, whereas for a refrigerator which is integrated in a cryostat, a compromise must always be found between cooling power and spatial extension of the refrigerator. The inventive NMR spectrometer realizes cooling of the NMR probe head and liquid tanks in the cryostat with one single refrigerator which is disposed at a separation from the cryostat. Omission of device components and the flexibility of arrangement of the present heat exchangers whose temperature levels can be optimized to the required cooling temperatures permit highly effective utilization of the cooling power of the refrigerator.  
       LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS  
       [0000]    
       
           1   a,   1   b  cooling circuit NMR probe head  
           1   c  cooling circuit pre-amplifier  
           1   d  cooling circuit resonator  
           2   a,   2   b  cooling circuit nitrogen tank  
           3   a,   3   b  cooling circuit helium tank  
           4  NMR probe head  
           5  housing  
           6  cold head  
           7  outer shell  
           8  helium tank  
           9  nitrogen tank  
           10  neck tube in the helium tank  
           11  neck tube in the nitrogen tank  
           12  pre-amplifier  
           13  resonator  
           14   a,b  transfer lines NMR probe head  
           15  transfer line cryostat  
           16  compressor  
           17  pump  
           18  valve  
           19  valve  
           20  valve  
           21  heat exchanger  
           22  first cold head stage  
           23  second cold head stage  
           24  heat exchanger (first stage 55 K)  
           25  heat exchanger (second stage 4.2 K)  
           26  heat exchanger (nitrogen tank)  
           27  line section  
           28  heat exchanger (12 K)  
           29  pump  
           30  valve  
           31  heat exchanger (4.2 K)  
           32  Joule-Thomson valve  
           33  heat exchanger (18 K)  
           34  heat exchanger (6 K)