https://x.com/Gaurab/status/2038113301352398958
The world's liquid helium depends on 16 plants. Building a new one takes 3 to 6 years. Why?
Helium is different from most other gases. When extracted from natural gas, every other component freezes out during cryogenic processing. But above −228°C, the standard industrial method of expanding gas through a valve to cool it makes helium hotter, not colder. So liquefaction at −269°C requires turboexpanders spinning at up to 250,000 rpm.
Getting helium to 99.9999% semiconductor grade means concentrating it 1,250 times, then purifying it through 7 stages across a 900-degree temperature range.
The final stage uses zirconium alloy cartridges at 700°C to chemically bind impurities below 1 part per billion. The turboexpanders are built by less than five companies worldwide, the zirconium cartridges by even fewer. Lead times for either: 12 to 24 months. The US sold its strategic helium reserve in January 2024. Semiconductor fabs carry about one week of inventory.


