Room-temperature Polymer-assisted Additive Manufacturing of Microchanneled Magnetocaloric Structures

Magnetic refrigeration is an energy-efficient, sustainable, environmentally friendly alternative to the conventional vapor-compression cooling technology. There are several magnetic refrigerator device designs in existence today that are predicted to be highly energy-efficient, on condition that sui...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of alloys and compounds 2022-11, Vol.920, p.165891, Article 165891
Hauptverfasser: Sharma, Vaibhav, Balderson, Lilly, Heo, Rachel, Bishop, Omar, Hunt, Caitlin S.M., Carpenter, Everett E., Hadimani, Ravi L., Zhao, Hong, Barua, Radhika
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Magnetic refrigeration is an energy-efficient, sustainable, environmentally friendly alternative to the conventional vapor-compression cooling technology. There are several magnetic refrigerator device designs in existence today that are predicted to be highly energy-efficient, on condition that suitable working materials can be developed. This challenge in manufacturing magnetocaloric devices is unresolved, mainly due to issues related to shaping the mostly brittle magnetocaloric alloys into thin-walled channeled regenerator structures to facilitate efficient heat transfer between the solid refrigerant and the heat exchange fluid in an active magnetic regenerator (AMR) cooling device. To address this challenge, a novel extrusion-based additive manufacturing (AM) method has been developed to print 3D microchanneled magnetocaloric structures. The printing ink consists of magnetocaloric powders, a polymer binder, and multiple solvents to achieve desirable shear-thinning property, which is critical for a robust printing process. Acting as a sacrificial binding agent for the magnetic powders, the polymer binder holds the 3D printed structures in place and is removed subsequently using a two-step heat-treatment process. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the fabrication process, spatially designed microchannels with minimum dimensions of 150µm were achieved using nanoscaled La0.6Ca0.4MnO3 powders (diameter~10nm). Results indicate that the crystallographic properties and magnetofunctional response of the sintered 3D printed samples are comparable to that of the precursor powders. Overall, this study provides a promising route for realizing low-cost magnetic regenerators, thus potentially eliminating one of the main barriers to the commercialization of magnetic cooling technology. [Display omitted] •Room temperature extrusion-based method for 3D printing magnetocaloric structures•Significant magnetocaloric response in 3D printed LCMO scaffolds (ΔS=4.9J/kg-K at 5T)•Microchanneled magnetocaloric structures with record spatial resolution (dia∼150µm)•Overcoming a crucial barrier to the commercialization of magnetic cooling technology
ISSN:0925-8388
1873-4669
DOI:10.1016/j.jallcom.2022.165891