| Literature DB >> 31780556 |
Huilong Hou1, Emrah Simsek2, Tao Ma2, Nathan S Johnson3, Suxin Qian4, Cheikh Cissé3, Drew Stasak1, Naila Al Hasan1, Lin Zhou2, Yunho Hwang5, Reinhard Radermacher5, Valery I Levitas2,6,7, Matthew J Kramer2,8, Mohsen Asle Zaeem3, Aaron P Stebner3, Ryan T Ott2, Jun Cui2,8, Ichiro Takeuchi9,10.
Abstract
Elastocaloric cooling, a solid-state cooling technology, exploits the latent heat released and absorbed by stress-induced phase transformations. Hysteresis associated with transformation, however, is detrimental to efficient energy conversion and functional durability. We have created thermodynamically efficient, low-hysteresis elastocaloric cooling materials by means of additive manufacturing of nickel-titanium. The use of a localized molten environment and near-eutectic mixing of elemental powders has led to the formation of nanocomposite microstructures composed of a nickel-rich intermetallic compound interspersed among a binary alloy matrix. The microstructure allowed extremely small hysteresis in quasi-linear stress-strain behaviors-enhancing the materials efficiency by a factor of four to seven-and repeatable elastocaloric performance over 1 million cycles. Implementing additive manufacturing to elastocaloric cooling materials enables distinct microstructure control of high-performance metallic refrigerants with long fatigue life.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31780556 DOI: 10.1126/science.aax7616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728