| Literature DB >> 34099742 |
Kartik Sau1, Tamio Ikeshoji1, Shigeyuki Takagi2, Shin-Ichi Orimo2,3, Daniel Errandonea4, Dewei Chu5, Claudio Cazorla6.
Abstract
Traditional refrigeration technologies based on compression cycles of greenhouse gases pose serious threats to the environment and cannot be downscaled to electronic device dimensions. Solid-state cooling exploits the thermal response of caloric materials to changes in the applied external fields (i.e., magnetic, electric and/or mechanical stress) and represents a promising alternative to current refrigeration methods. However, most of the caloric materials known to date present relatively small adiabatic temperature changes ([Formula: see text] to 10 K) and/or limiting irreversibility issues resulting from significant phase-transition hysteresis. Here, we predict by using molecular dynamics simulations the existence of colossal barocaloric effects induced by pressure (isothermal entropy changes of [Formula: see text] J K[Formula: see text] kg[Formula: see text]) in the energy material Li[Formula: see text]B[Formula: see text]H[Formula: see text]. Specifically, we estimate [Formula: see text] J K[Formula: see text] kg[Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] K for a small pressure shift of P = 0.1 GPa at [Formula: see text] K. The disclosed colossal barocaloric effects are originated by a fairly reversible order-disorder phase transformation involving coexistence of Li[Formula: see text] diffusion and (BH)[Formula: see text] reorientational motion at high temperatures.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34099742 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-91123-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379