A Matter of Size and Stress: Understanding the First‐Order Transition in Materials for Solid‐State Refrigeration

Solid‐state magnetic refrigeration is a high‐potential, resource‐efficient cooling technology. However, many challenges involving materials science and engineering need to be overcome to achieve an industry‐ready technology. Caloric materials with a first‐order transition—associated with a large vol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced functional materials 2017-08, Vol.27 (32), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Gottschall, Tino, Benke, Dimitri, Fries, Maximilian, Taubel, Andreas, Radulov, Iliya A., Skokov, Konstantin P., Gutfleisch, Oliver
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container_end_page n/a
container_issue 32
container_start_page
container_title Advanced functional materials
container_volume 27
creator Gottschall, Tino
Benke, Dimitri
Fries, Maximilian
Taubel, Andreas
Radulov, Iliya A.
Skokov, Konstantin P.
Gutfleisch, Oliver
description Solid‐state magnetic refrigeration is a high‐potential, resource‐efficient cooling technology. However, many challenges involving materials science and engineering need to be overcome to achieve an industry‐ready technology. Caloric materials with a first‐order transition—associated with a large volume expansion or contraction—appear to be the most promising because of their large adiabatic temperature and isothermal entropy changes. In this study, using experiment and simulation, it is demonstrated with the most promising magnetocaloric candidate materials, La–Fe–Si, Mn–Fe–P–Si, and Ni–Mn–In–Co, that the characteristics of the first‐order transition are fundamentally determined by the evolution of mechanical stresses. This phenomenon is referred to as the stress‐coupling mechanism. Furthermore, its applicability goes beyond magnetocaloric materials, since it describes the first‐order transitions in multicaloric materials as well. Solid‐state magnetic refrigeration is a high‐potential cooling technology. Materials with a first‐order transition are most promising because of their large adiabatic temperature and isothermal entropy changes. In this study, it is demonstrated with the magnetocaloric materials La–Fe–Si, Mn–Fe–P–Si, and Ni–Mn–In–Co, using experiment and simulation, that the characteristics of the first‐order transition are fundamentally determined by the evolution of mechanical stresses.
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Materials with a first‐order transition are most promising because of their large adiabatic temperature and isothermal entropy changes. 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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Adiabatic flow
Cobalt
Computer simulation
Cooling
Iron
Magnetic materials
magnetic refrigeration
magnetocaloric effect
Manganese
Materials science
Materials selection
multicaloric effect
Nickel
phase transition
Refrigeration
title A Matter of Size and Stress: Understanding the First‐Order Transition in Materials for Solid‐State Refrigeration
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