Union Minister of State for Science & Technology inaugurated a new Liquid Helium Facility, marking a milestone in India’s capabilities in quantum science, cryogenics, advanced materials, and next-generation computing.
Liquid Helium Facility
- Inaugurated as a national research infrastructure asset.
- It Supports:
- Cryogenic engineering
- Superconductivity
- Quantum computing & sensing
- Photonics
- Healthcare technologies
- Green energy devices
- The facility is Critical for MRI systems, Cryogenic Electron Microscopy (cryo-EM) and Advanced materials characterisation
- Equipped with an efficient helium recovery system:
- Expected to reduce cost of cryogenic experiments to nearly one-tenth
- Conserves liquid helium, one of the rarest resources
About Liquid helium
- Liquid helium is helium gas in its liquid state obtained by cooling helium to extremely low temperatures.
- It is the coldest known liquid and is widely used in advanced scientific and industrial applications.
- Physical Properties:
- Helium liquefies at around –269°C (4.2 Kelvin) at normal atmospheric pressure.
- It has an extremely low boiling point, lower than any other element.
- Liquid helium has very low density and very low viscosity.
- It is chemically inert and non-toxic, making it safe for controlled industrial use.
- Major Uses:
- Liquid helium is widely used to cool superconducting magnets in MRI machines.
- It is used in particle accelerators and high-energy physics experiments.
- It is essential for quantum computing and quantum research because it provides ultra-low temperature environments.
- It is used in space science to cool infrared sensors in satellites and telescopes.