cryoteknik
Cryoteknik, or cryotechnology, is the practice and study of producing, maintaining, and using extremely low temperatures for scientific, industrial, and medical purposes. It encompasses generating cryogenic temperatures (typically below −150 °C / 123 K), handling cryogenic fluids such as liquid nitrogen (−196 °C) and liquid helium (−269 °C), and designing equipment that operates at these temperatures.
Core technologies include liquefaction plants, storage dewars, cryostats, and cryocoolers (such as pulse-tube, Stirling, and Joule-Thomson
Applications are diverse. In scientific research, cryogenics enables low-temperature physics, superconductivity, and the operation of sensitive
Safety and regulation emphasize oxygen deficiency hazards, cold burns, and pressure risks. Adequate ventilation, oxygen monitors,
Historically, the field advanced with the liquefaction of helium by Heike Kamerlingh Onnes in 1908 and the