Self-oscillating polymeric refrigerator with high energy efficiency

Electrocaloric 1 , 2 and electrostrictive 3 , 4 effects concurrently exist in dielectric materials. Combining these two effects could achieve the lightweight, compact localized thermal management that is promised by electrocaloric refrigeration 5 . Despite a handful of numerical models and schematic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2024-05, Vol.629 (8014), p.1041-1046
Hauptverfasser: Han, Donglin, Zhang, Yingjing, Huang, Cenling, Zheng, Shanyu, Wu, Dongyuan, Li, Qiang, Du, Feihong, Duan, Hongxiao, Chen, Weilin, Shi, Junye, Chen, Jiangping, Liu, Gang, Chen, Xin, Qian, Xiaoshi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Electrocaloric 1 , 2 and electrostrictive 3 , 4 effects concurrently exist in dielectric materials. Combining these two effects could achieve the lightweight, compact localized thermal management that is promised by electrocaloric refrigeration 5 . Despite a handful of numerical models and schematic presentations 6 , 7 , current electrocaloric refrigerators still rely on external accessories to drive the working bodies 8 – 10 and hence result in a low device-level cooling power density and coefficient of performance (COP). Here we report an electrocaloric thin-film device that uses the electro-thermomechanical synergy provided by polymeric ferroelectrics. Under one-time a.c. electric stimulation, the device is thermally and mechanically cycled by the working body itself, resulting in an external-driver-free, self-cycling, soft refrigerator. The prototype offers a directly measured cooling power density of 6.5 W g −1 and a peak COP exceeding 58 under a zero temperature span. Being merely a 30-µm-thick polymer film, the device achieved a COP close to 24 under a 4 K temperature span in an open ambient environment (32% thermodynamic efficiency). Compared with passive cooling, the thin-film refrigerator could immediately induce an additional 17.5 K temperature drop against an electronic chip. The soft, polymeric refrigerator can sense, actuate and pump heat to provide automatic localized thermal management. We report on a near-zero-power flexible heat pump that uses both electrocaloric and electrostrictive properties of a tailored polymer to create a chip-scale refrigerator device.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-024-07375-3